For 36 hours ending. 5 By! Sunday
Vietoria and vicinity—Light to mod-
erate winds, senctally fair with fog
‘VoL: 67 NO. 86
VICTORIA, B.C., SATURDAY,
£2 aE Pinanenabs ge
WHERE TO GO TO-NIGHT
{tol "The -Man Who Found Him-
self.”
D@minion
“A Regular Fellow
Coliseum—""The Pink Lady-
Play houre—
Columbia
Crystas Garden—Sait
OCTOBER 10, 1925.
32 PAGES.
“The Playhouse Carnival
“The Fire Patrol."
Water Gathing
FRE FEV CEES = FIVE-CENTS--—
L_FIGHT OPENS IN ROUSING FASHION HERE HERE
WASHINGTON TURNS BACK PIRATES 4-3
‘Sam Rice’ s Brilliant
atches Rob Pirates.
“Of Two Homeruns
Pittsburg Got Away in Lael But ‘Rally in Bighth|
Brought Washington Through to Victory; Hitting|
of Judge and Goslin Features Stick Attack of|
Champions; Most Thrilling Game of Series to|
Date; Washington Now Have Two Wins to Pitts-
burg’s One.
Griffith Stadium, Washington, Ovt.40, <am-Rice-hanted-down
two long hits as they were about to descend into the b! eachers, and |
as a result Washington won the third ganie of the
~Gefeating Pittsbirg by 4—3. Tt was by far the- most_heetic
of the present series. Practically everything that could be in jecté d]
into a ball game was s presente d for the perusal of the fans, Spark
ling baseball, bad play's; superlative direction by Stanley Harris |
and the cheers of President and’ Mrs. Coolidge all tended
1t a@ most memorable game.
STEPHEN JONES
STARTS NEW
| desperate rally to even tl
Smith, the husky Pirate
emashed % long hit towar
bl her Rice flashed aftre
i im most spectacular
lee 1 in a series. The Pirates clatmed |
1 LT RCA NUE RTE tie tet trey
world’s series, |
game}
to make
| The
Waal
Jand “*¢
livering
the
outstanding formers fo
Joe Judge
the pune t
runs
* and Goslin wauld
hel pe a great deal
In the sixth Rice galloped
dong fly thos
ttsburg third basem
ig droppir fast ir
when Rice !
awa
EA Tee
itup. It
In
staged «
re EB art |
eatcher
out
Yates Street ‘Site, in Auto-
mobile Row, to be Improved
With Four Stores:
Mive Heralded b by Realtors as! sco
Mr. Jones Led Building |
Boom in 1907
Without -any
nouncements
tions for
started
ction
rs
the
in
umpires ruled herwise
RED FIRST RUN
top of all thia Rice
} Washingtos He
e in the third and
whaled the .bal
nd w
On
two |
Fad
1 Judge
preliminary
building
Stephen
thas Morning
of four
street, just
Dominion Theatre
Plans -for the new
were completed recently
contract—let—by—Mr
I ros. Liniited. The contracte
to-day pit a gang at work demolish
ing the Off Wioden bulldinga on the aie 7 ns rape
site, which tneludes that of the ot)" : : ‘ |
Dominion Hotel barns The t 2 |
CITY LAND
an
opera
Jones were
er
Yates
stores
“ast
he (Concluded on page #)
HARVEST PAYMENTS
two months
Plans show the ilding to b
{ Spanish-Canadian architecture, of}
design quite different from any |
ling yet ected in Vic
front of the bu ding ae
a hooded roof of terra
walls of the pbuilding canon. on
street with carry decor me Hight
Phe wanalng, wil one}
ere
ia
eott
The
the
lustere
story
From the designs we sure working
on, I think tbe Suliding will xt
much distinction and character,” Mr
Jofies explained t lay
“The fact t
a good dems
stores I the
prospect “in ctoria as dk,
rest of Western Canada never loo
hetter than does at
appears to be}
for modern
siness |
N NUMBER
| Weekly Sisaares Bid Fair to}
ket | Exceed Monthly Totals. of
oe has Last Spring
mprovement of t
Street is eloping fast anc 5 ——
sidered the moat promising
;, Land. buyers are now
street in the city as retail bu
each week almost as many deals
led to
closing
follows the residential drift }
(Concluded on page 2 }
as were. completed in any month |
WCE WOW =
NQURED BY AITO
ment by ~-Major~Kirkpatrick-|
Crockett, who-has charge of tand
sales
Lies in Critical Condition in,
Hospital as Result of Acci- | iii. “vice kates over the counter,
dent To-day | he prices received ing $+eego in
| the aggregate. Fifteen properties have |
been taken up by buyers who have!
either commenced building — opera
tions ,or ‘are actively preparing to
construct homes on the sites
The Office sales made since May
have been as follows: - June, - two
sales for $1,400; July, three sales for
$6,300; August four sales for $5,500; |
September twenty-one. sales for
$29,406, and Detober, to date, five
sales for $4,200.
PROSPECTS FINE J
“The progressiye increase in busi-
ness js the mosf interesting feature
of this tabulation, remarked* Major |
Kirkpatrick-Crockett. “There are a}
bumber of sales now In ppoce ss |
goulation, and it looks ae though}
week will be one of the best}
the depart-
(Concluded on page 3)
Since
the end. of - May
the Lands Department has made
r
Vancouver, Oct. 1 A woman, aged
“ahout titty, believed to be H: Mrs
Harrison,-a-widow. residing in South}
Vancouver, was knocked dewn by an
slitomobile.on-Kingway at 8 o'cho ik}
this morning and now Hes hovering |
between life and death in a hospital |
here.
According to George Parts driver |
of the auto, the woman tust per
stepped from the sidewalk, walked |
against the side of his ear and been
hit-by, the rear mudguard. |
She was thrown to-the ground and |
has been | unconscious ever. since
CLYDE WON CUP |
+ Glasgow, Get. 14 “Canadian
Cup)—Cliyde to-day won the Glasgow
Cup from Celtic by a score ‘of 2 to 1
‘The-trophiy~ 4a°--erablementic of the
champlonship. of this oily.
Prees |,
next
records yet attained by
ment.”
= SALES GROW:
| frost ‘of the season
| HOLDS FIVE OF
ITALY’S PORTFOLIOS;
PREMIER MUSSOLINI
ssolini Was
the ur
never
juestioned
al than now As
temporarily
erday of the
during the
minister, is di
than five of the
the Cloyernmernt,
THPSriAt UiVvision
ffairs
tak-
Port
nance at
5 no fewer
j
rents of
+ +
he ;
|
+
SHIPS DELAYED. _—i|
BY WINTRY WEATHER ||
Oct
and district
the est
nin this distrie
lek
* 10
ire @k-
mr of
Snow
nches t and till fall
Ships had te op on vembore St
bender rine os
Que,
Line
Seabee
wa
= OTA AND TT |
HAVE EARLY SNOW
\Fall is General Throughout)
Ontario; Montreal’s Wintry |
Covering Three Inches Deep
- }
Blizzard in. Eastern Town-
ships: ~People- There Hunt
Up Winter Clothing
|
10
find the
Montreal awe
ke
and
streets
pani
gale
EASTERN TOWNSHIPS
Sherbrooke, qu Oct 1 Resi
dents of the Townships
morning we greeted b :
Winted. blizzard. &
inch-andg-a-half of snow ¢
ind, and there’ wa
Winter
| ONTARIO SHIVERS
Toronto, The
ee throughout
yosterday is sald by weather
he been the rilest
yest on Or 18 was theearlicat
scorded in this provinces
of fatling 1 es and an
more of ice -on-steriding
“ brought home. sharply to the
peopie in this part of the country
thie ‘morning the fact that Winter {a
noar.
Last
0
Eastert this
mid-
an
red the
hunt
ck
gro
for
eral
i ger
Oct. 10 yw which
Ontario
men to
ord. ‘Till |
Rerally
nore
snow.
Showers
inch of
ater
night provided UtWe first real
with from ten to
TWel¥e Gegreea Helow Rdedatin: re-
corded Late aches, tomatoes and
other garden tow ory “the crops suf-
fered heavily,
ITALIAN SENATE
TO BE ELECTED
Rome, Oct. 10.—-What is called the
third wave of the Fasciet revolution
reached ita height Friday, when the
Council of Ministers dealt with the
proposal of the Fyeciat grand coun.
cil for reform of the Senate.
Under the Sénate proposal, the pp-
per House of Parliament would be
gradually transformed from a body,
the members of which are appointed
by the King, to an elective body, the
electors being representatives * of
various organizations recognized: by
the Fascist Government, chiefly those
ofthe farmers and_workingmen,
The Fascist ide? ts to increase the
importance of the Senate gradually
until it becomes the sneretmportant
of the two Houses of Parliament. -
| west as the. foothilla of the
Sor maar puRtsat) lemmas tases
TRAIN INITALY
FELL-FROM: BRIDGE ;
FIFTEEN DEAT: is|
Rome, Oct. 10-—A violent storm
in the Provinces of Calabria
“ tragic sequel last night when
& Passenger train fell through a
wrecked bridge. Fifteen persons
lost their lives.
TF. BRAMLEY, BRITISH
LABOR-LENDER, DIED)
| Succumbed Suddenly i in Ams-
| terdam; Was Attending Meet-
ing-in That City
EIGHTEEN LOST
“LES IN RIOTS
IN FLORENCE
Opponents in That City
Outgrowth of Assassination
of Luperini; Free Masons
Cease to Hold Meetings
Paris, Oct: 10—L’Humanite
says eighteen persons were
killed and forty-wounded in-the
| Was Secretary of British} recent rioting in Florence, Italy.
| Trades Congress; Formerly
Member of Parliament
| Between Fascists and Their
Denton; ca a 10> “The Tondo
Daily Express saya Facist re
London,..Oct. 16—A_ message from} Prisals in Florence for the aséas
Amsterdam to Labor headquarters| sination of Signor Luperini,.a
here states Fred Bramley, well known ,
member of the Facist
Labor leader and former M.P lied .
suddenly last night. - He had! rectorate, included the killing of
ittending a meetihe of
Fed
them lawyers and the former Social-
ist deputy Pilati
Famous shops
was
and a number of
burned
of terror during the Factet outburst
of revenge
The s#écre
Party Di-|
the| » number of anti-Fac ists, most of |
private homes were sacked and some |
The city was under a reign |
The newspaper says that until now}
Forty Wounded ‘in Clashes’ in
mentar
& nion os
MUST JUDGE
—TOLMIE BY
HIS POLICY
He Had Key of Western oF
velopment But Did Not T
It, Odlum Asserts
|Both Candidates Good Men,
He Says, But Issue Trans-
cends Personalities
onic Order
Sault
Having
ed Bramley
had heen secretary of the
formerly organizing of a om, the world
Association
Mason clashes in Florence, in which
folk
from. the territory uniess they
veara old
Eritish Trades Union Congress since
ginning work as a cabines.
Fyrcnishing Trade and | MEETINGS CANCELLED
was three times elected to the parila-|° Rome, Oct. 10—Domixio Tx
severa!] persons were killed
PROTECTION FOR INDIANS
a signed permit from | him
tive of the International
n of Trade Unions
who rifty-one}
1923
maker gained an education by
his own 1d subsequently be
came a writer and lecturer on'soclal
and’ sconomic qusstiet=—He—wast-s—eoneptracy has” Velied
secretary
committee of the Trade! Grand Master of the M
neress in Italy, to-day issued
all lodges to hold no meetings and
cease all work until farther notice.
His action follows the recent Faciat-
Ste Mari Ont., Oct 10
received complaints of per-
sistent bootlegging on the Garden
River Reserve, Indian Agent A
McNab has barred all white
|Sons— of V.- -Joyel stebiaia
| Three’ Jail Breakers; Their
Recapture Followed
Both candidates in the present
Federal election in Victoria are
good men—but one represents a}
party that has staked its life on|
a policy of fair and equal treat
ment for Western Canada, and}
the other stands for a party
which is deterniined to perpetu
system designed for the
of the East alone. With
to the people of. Vie-7
Gene Victor Odlum of |
summarized the ‘issues of
election, when he electrified the
campaign meeting list,
Men Who Got Away From
Winnipeg
Winnipeg, Oct. 10—The alert
ness of two country boys was
responsible for the r
| two alleged murderers and an al
legwéd bandit who fled from the
provincial jail here .éarly last
Tuesday. morning. The men,
John Stanton;atleged “‘hammer|
murderer,’’ leader of the jail)
breakers, Alex Shnupeniuk,
ate
ady
au
antage
this warning
toria Brig
Vancouver
the
big Liberal
night.
In one of the most striking politi-
cal speeches ever heard In Victoria,| charged with the
General Odlum declared that he had! farmer at Inwood,
nothing but the most friendly feelinga | . ab.
for Hon..8.F. Tolmie, But Dr. Tol- oF iy > ere
mie, he warned, represented a party atrawetack neat
which stood eg Seeerh BOLSY at! Southern Mayitoba,
the expense of the West Moreover, |
he had been & member of thd Meighen VISITED STORE
Government which had done nothing Two of the jail
to give the Wast freight rate justice,
which had ‘watched grain from as far
Rockies
moving. eastward instead of coming
to the Pacific Coast
‘Dr. Tolmie had in his haad the
key to right this situation—freight
rates,” he asserted. “He did nét turn |
it. The King Goveriment had that!
|
|
Man.,
alleged
eaptured in a
Silver Plains,
last evening
and
breakers, Shu
in the little village store in St
Agathe, twenty-five milés south of
Winnipeg, ‘Wednesday night
were recognized by the two sons of
the storekeeper. The identification
was made from. pictures published
in a local newspaper. The provincial
(Conclué.d on page 2) °
key and turned it.”
In this election, General Odjum
urgedy-the electors of V ictoriafehould
regard the two candidates not as
personal friends but as the represen-
tatives of .two distinct parties and
two distinct policies.
@n_one hand, said the General..was
the Conservative Party, whose leader,
Rightdion. Arthur iMcighen, had _as-
sailed-rate relief to the West,
whether he had been referring in his
famous Halifax speech to a Judgment
of the Rallway Board orto the leg-
islation pf the Government.
—
Ottawa, Oct. 10.—Canada’s com-
metcial apple crop this year is now
estimated at an increase of three per
On the other hand was-the Mae-| cent over-1924, or 2,950,33)_barrels.
kenzie King Government which; after | which is seventy-five per cent of the
a period of confasion tn Canadian! five-year average, according to a re-
politics, was ‘working now towards | port just issued by the Department
one distinct , goal—Jirtice for alt|of Agriculture,
parts of Canada, “To-day.” he as-| |All the provinces show a decrease,
serted, “Premier Mackenzie-King haa | except Ontario, where there ts an
staked his political future on that | wareane of approximately 500,000
broad policy. forthe first time a [Petree
Prime Minister has had the courage The greatest decrease i# reported I
to-do. right, whatever the “political
considération may be.”
(Concluded ‘on page i**
less than last year.
A recent survey of British Colum-
murder of a}
peniuk and Labodiuk, purchased food |
rrigiana|!
an order to/
have)
Police Still Hunting For Two!
recapture of} I
cUnMAN | troops.
and}
‘PROFITABLE AND STEADY —
MARKET FOR THIS YEAR’S
CANADIAN CROP OF APPLES
Nota Scotia, with over 276,000 ris i
SUE
night shows only s
| teen, outgoing
STAKE IN
COMMEMORATES
OLD NAVIGATORS
| | Electors Must Decide Verdict Not on Personalities ‘But:
WESTERN DEVELOPMENT AT
POLL, LIBERAL *
5 WARN VICTORIANS.
apt sr
ee
on Clear-cut Issue Between Liberal Programme of:
Western: Pragress and
Conservative Policy, . De-- ;
signed for East Alone, Speakers Tell Rousing}
Meeting as Government. Campaign pens.
BIG GROWTH HERE T0 RESULT FROM
-UBERAL’ PLANS,
|
DR. KING ASSERTS:
Development of Victoria and Coast Only Possible on’
Foundation of Equal Treatment for All Parts of
Canada, Minister Warns; Elevator Plans Here to
Go Ahead Soon on Basis of New Rate Changes;
Equalization Has Come
Returned.
Cajfn on Gonzales Heights which
wil) be unvelied and officially dedi- |
cated to the memory of the pioneer | Ot on personalities but on the cle
seafaring men on October 19, under! for’ all parts of Canada,
the auspices of the B.C. Hfstorical |
‘hesociation | Government,
Party,
as spo
IRISH ELECTION.
Dobtin, Oct T0-—The completed
count of the elections for the Senate
of the Irish Free State finished last
én of the nine-
enators were re
in rousing fashion.
Hon.-J.-H. King; Federat fini
General Victor Odlum, M.P.P.,
didate hére, united in asking the
High Lights of Liberal Campaign Opening
Hon. J. H. King, Minister of Public Works:
‘*Rate equalization has-come and will stay."’
‘Rate equalization will mean stimulation of business here,
in Western Canada, in Eastern Canada and in the Maritimes.”
‘*You have no more right t impose unequal freight rate
tariffs than unequal sectional cutoms tariffs,’’
**Canada’s supreme need to-day is not tariffs but markets.”’
Brigadier-General Victor Odlum:
“It was the Liberal Party which first recognized the in-
|| justice of the old rate structure."’
‘The Liberal Party has come to the conclusion that the only
rate policy to follow is the simple policy of justice for all.’’
‘For the first time a Prime Minister has had the courage to
do right whatever the political consideration may be.’
“Dr. Tolmie had the key in his hand to right this rate situa-
tion. He did not turn it, The King Government had the key and
turned it.’
William McK. Ivel:
‘This is the time when we must decide whether we will insist
on equal rights or go on as we are.’’
‘Emigration to the United States has only been on a large
scale under a Tory policy.”
Tresers Kitteo (G0 V ERNMENT
___MAFIGHT BEHIND PORT
‘coves Sect’! GROWTH HERE
Liberal Policies Alone Insure|
and many wounded at Santa Rita, in
the State of Rio Grande do Sul, on
Victoria of Big Development,
Says Ivel
Se
elected
were
Thursday in a clash with | state
CANADA’S ARCTIC
VESSEL RETURNS
10.—The Canadian
exploration ship
Arctic arrived ‘at Quebec this
morning from a three-month
trip to the Fur North.
Victoria's present beginnings
of-port development on a large
scale are the result of the Mac
kenzie King Government’s work
an/l of that alone, William McK
Ive:, Liberal eandidate -in Vie
toria, declared wher he opened
his campaign in the Royal-Vic-
| torin Theatre last night. He
asked the electors to consider
Quebec, Oct
Government
the election is a choice between two
| policies—the Liberal policy based on |
the development of the West and the
Conservative policy based on the de-
expense :
Mr. Ivel pointed to the Govern-
| newts efforte to develop the, use of
j the Ogden Point pliers here:as an ex-
ample of +ta determination to build
up Pacific Coast ports. The Gov-
ernment, he pointed out, had started
to creates lumier assembly plant on
the pilers, and had arranged with ela-
vator companies to-erect grain ele-
vators there. It was for the people
of Victoria to aay in the election, he
declared, whether they, wanted this
kind of development or not. Without
the Government's policy of equal
treatment for ali parts of Canada, hd
polnied out. deyelopiient.in the coast
cities would be impossible
“Iin-every possible way; Mr. fvel mw-
serted, the Mackenzie King Govern-
bia's commercial apple crop condi-
tions shows the. crop .to be bé@tter
than anticipated earlier in the -sea-
son, and is_estimated . at 2.318.138
boxes. The heaviest crop is reported
from the Southern Okanagan and
the| Arrow Lakes region.
The apple crops in England and
continental Europe are below the
average. These conditions, it. is
stated, point to a steady demand for
Canadian apples, and providing there
are no industrial distudbantes be-
tween now and Spring, the demand,
should be good, with eederty ‘market-
ing.
=
and William Melvel,
{ Bailie
| that now,” he said
to Stay if Government Is
In the election of October 29 the people of Victoria must vote
ut policy of equal treatment
ed by fhe Mackenzie King
ra
and the frank Eastern polity of the Conservative
Liberal leaders told a crowded meeting in the Royal Vic-
toria Theatre last night, when the Liberal cempeign here: opened
ster of Public Works, Brigadier-
liberal can-
people of Victoria for their own
interests and for the interests ef
Western Canada to forget all person-
al considerations and’ support the
Western programme wpon which the
Government has staked its existence,
VICTORIA TO BENEFIT
| BY GOVERNMENT POLICY
Already Victoria is -ahout~to-—feet
the result of the Government's rate
im tho astahHabsent. of an
} industry here, Dr. King de-
clared, adding that the Government
had completed negotiations with one
elevator compeny which would soon
starty-construgtion~ ond was now
negotiating vis another concern
Announcing’ the policy of the Gc
érnment he said: “We have no more
right to have unequal freight. tariffs
than unequal rectional Customs
tariffs Equalization has come and
will stay This will mean new
stimulation to the Pacific Coast, new
stimulation to the trade of Western
Canada and Eastern Canada.”
In contract to the Government's
Policy of absolute equality in trans-
portation —cor Dr. Ke aaserted,
the Conservative Party offers a policy
which is stated by “Rt. Hon. Arthur
Meighen one way while he fs in’ the
Maritimes and in another way when
he comes” West. In the face or theses
facta, he urged, the people of Victoria
must decide at the election not on
the personality of-candidates but on
@ pure question of principle and
policy
vator
v-
The question to ask yourselves to-
day,” he said, “is whether you like
the new Australian’ Treaty, budget
surpluses and rate equalization 1¢
you do, and you are honest, there is
only one thing you can do in this elec-
tion
Looking forward to the fulfill- ~
ment of the Government’s rate
equalization policy and its pro-
gramme ‘of Western develop-
ment, Dr. King declared that the
port of Victoria had much to
expect in this progress. The
Government, he said, had defin-
itely recognized Victoria oe a
potential grain port of magni-
tude and importance. To make
possible its growth in this di-
rection it had arranged to lease
part of the Ogden Point piers
for elevator purposes. This agree-
ment, he explained, is complete
now and the work of constructin
the elevater will commence
an early date.
“It should be particularly grat!-
fying to the people of. Victoria,
he eornartio’. “5 that this develop-
ment is to be carried on by pri-
vate capital, indicating that busi-
nessmen appreciate the possibill-
ties of this port: This is - real,
sound business, not government
pap, Victoria will find its place
in the sun.”
All this development, Dr. King
pointed out, is made possible by the
rate policies of the Government, now.
under fierée attack by Mr. Meighen,
if these policies were scrapped grain
velopment of the Bast at the West'e}busineds here would be. impossible, he -
| warned
The Minister had, no doubt, how-
ever. that the. Government. would. be
returned by a good working majority.
‘There can te no question about
Por this, reason
the people of Victoria must decide
not only between two policies but
also whether they would elect a sup-
porter of the Government of an Op-
position member.
(Concluded ‘on page 14)
St
ment had bgen fair to Victoria, Vic-
toria, he said, had received, and
Would recelvid, a bounteous share oF
the new trade buiit.up.by.the Govern-
tent through ‘its policies and its new
‘trade treaties. :
(Concluded pR-page: 16),
5
}
+
+h
meetin memennintn moe RRROEES 4
|
|
°
From.Octoper..14.to—17—is Pharmacy Week: ,
See our Window Display of Drugs gathered
from all corners of the glabe.
‘Than a
l
B.C. and Prairie Dealers
Argue Combines Investiga-
~ tion Act is Ultra Vires
Will Ask Quashing of: Indict-
‘ment-in-Court-in. Vancouver.
Monday
Remember—Your Druggist is More
SPL 3 Merchant,
The Owl Drug Co.Ltd.
Campbell! Bidg., Prescription W._H.. Bland, Mor.
Fort and Ocugias _ Specialists Phone 1
A Se
ot.
Vancouver, Oct. 10- - Contention
that the Combiries Inv estigation Act
1923, and Section 498 of the Crimt-
nal Code, which are the basis for the
Prosecution _of : fifty-three British
Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan
and Manitoba fruit ‘and produce
dealers, aré ultra vires is advanced
BOYS’’ SCHOOL BOOTS
Williams's Solid and All Leather School Boots, $3.00
sizes 1 to 5}. Special .........ccscecceueees
THE ROYAL SHOE STORE
836 638 Yates Street argued in the Assize Court here. be»
fore Mr. Justice D. A. McDonald on
Monday on a ‘motion
indictment.
ee
it On Your Own Rugs
Columbia had no jurisdiction to in-
stitute the prosecution, it is claimed
with regard to those counts of the
indictment -which concern the Com-
dines Investigation Act, 1923.
It Js contended.there was no right
to _inelude .in_one indictment counts
triable by a judge and jury.
REPETITION. ALLEGED
Several counts inthe indictment
are in reality a repitition of the same
offence, itis alleged. :
The indictment is nuit and—vold
because it is vague and insufficient,
itis contended in conclusion.
WASHINGTON TURNS
BACK PIRATES 4-3
(Continued from page 1)
Ty
The way to know an electric cleaner is-to use it. See how
it operates. See how it draws out the dirt. Test it with lint
and ravelings—whereex-se-really been sewing. See if
it really does get the litter. We kiow so well what-our
cleanet will.do that we will weleome an opportunity to
test it out in your home. = :
ROYAL ELECTRIC CLEANERS
Special for This Month Only
$2.50 Cash and. $5.00 Monthly.
Douglas Street
was @gain very much in evidence. In
the seventh Harris decided to end the
hurling of Ferguson, who-had done
fairly well. He sent in Liebold to
binch-hit for his pitcher. Liebotd
drew a walk and.MoNeely, the flash;
Was sent to run for him.-_-Two-runs
resulted from thia move,-McNeely.
seoring the first: ’
MOVES SAVE GAME
The pineb-hitting meapt that
chariges had to be made in the Wash-
n | ington team. Marberry, the de luxe
= gees vt seats - made ¢ Esaeties. | relief pitcher, went to the mound and
Some of the members, however, are although in sore trouble in the
wt po ee ' Ny erie Pt on ninth, prevented a score. McNeely was
role qu ) 1s red, to- ;
thee wo on te being reviewed, sent-to centre field and made two
ether with électio sibiltie:
gether with fection possibilities. spectacular catches in the ninth. Sam
To date there’ are six Vacancies, . ;
. Rice went to right field to replace
caused hy Liberal and Independent
members entering the Federal elec Ine Harris Had the changes not
m rer ere e ute nash
‘ 4 a , ru tel c as!
tion fight. No breaks in the Farmer been made in the outdeld the smash
of Smith's would have gone for a
ranks"tave oe “ reported. homerun as Harris would never have
been fast enough to make the daring
} catch i*
Pittsburg scored a run in the sec-
nd. another-in the fourth and_ their
C. ELECTRIC
Langley Street
DECISION ON
ELECTION DATE
IN ALBERTA
Edmonton, Oct. 10.—The Alberta
“Government has called a caucus-on
ihe question of holding six by-el |
tiom’, the aiternadive being to. ‘
Reneral¢lection, Opinion in circles
mear the Government appears to lean
in thé direction of bringing. on the
| Thousands of ducks and geese lie |
ad in Tule Lake as the result of a
by-elections this Fall and leaving thc
general’ election ‘over until another
session has been held and the redis-
said to
Klamath Falls, Ore. Oct. 10.
- PAPER BOXES ae See
} gnant ponds.
FOLDING AND RIGID “RAPER To cope: with the situation. the
BOXES ~ United States biological survey has
A Victoria industry | been notified and will_conduct an
The best of work and quick delivery ic
examination to determine what ‘is
DAVIS & SCHMEELK Ltd.
the cause the wholesale deaths in
1202 Wharf St:, Foot of Bastion
2:
|b.
rates had a great chance, fling thé
ases with hitters like Barnt
Traynor coming up. Marberry
ever, held them off
The fourth game
be played to-morrow
BLEUGE OUT OF GAME
Ossie Biuege, “héaned” third
man of the Washir n Senators.
ete SEE Pala fae and will not 5)
to-day, it-was announced by Man-
ager Harris as hia men took the fleld
j with the Pirates for the: third game
of the world's series, in a Wintry
setting. Bluege was taken to a hos
pital, Harris disclosed after an
tempt to exercise had brought
some {ll effecta of the blow he sus
tained. Thursday in the second game
when hit by one of Vic Aldridgce’s
water or by rank
t and
rt and
how-
of the series will
(theranks of thousands upon thou-
base
sanda.of game birds.
8
Dr. Chas. A. Harding, Dentist, 31)
Union Bank. Hours 9 to-5.30. Even-
ing by appointment. Phone 7196, ¢**
: ++ +
If you want good butter ask your
grocer for Hollybrook Creamery
Quality guaranteed. ose fart cur
+ + > AF ‘ rves
Canadian National Railways, “Con- Harria asserted he did not believe
tinental Limited” leaves Vancouver | ‘here was or, oe for alarin
daily at 9.50 p.m, for Montreal and ge's condition howe. anos O3
| other points East. All steel equip- Mray disclosed no bre ken bones or
}ment, Including @rawing-room, com. | Other injury itis simply that he
SANITARY ENGINEERS partment, library, observation “ear | Deeds additional the manager
Agente for j with radio aoa; declared, adding that Bluege may he
“WILLIAMS OIL-O-MATIC |) aMe.t rn_to the game to-mor
HEATING |
Specialists in All Lines of Plumbing
646 Johnson St, Phone 1735
t
a
Cor. Fort and Quadra Sta
VALETERIA SERVICE Victoria, B.C.
McDOWELL & MANN
any in
rest,
+ + +
Mrs. Allinghan and Miss Reimer,
of the Hudson's Bay, have
lopened their own hair dressing par-
s.-fully-equippedA—at—25-- Winch
ing, 640 Fort St. Phone 1175. ***
+ + +
ret e
"’ late Mnhe-up
ington
to-day was
Rice, cf; S. Harris,
2b-;-Goslin,. Lf; Judge ib.; J. Harris,
rft.: Myer 3b. Peckinbaugh, s.s.;
tuel, c; Ferguson, p
Pittsburg—Moor
Curler, rif Barnhart, Lf.; Traynor.
3b.: Wright, ss; Grantham, 1b
Smith, ¢ Kremer p
Umptree—aAt piate, McCormick,
National first . base, Moriarity,
American|; second base, Rigler. Na
tional; third base, Owens, American
FIRST INNING
Pirates—The wind was aweeping
over the field when Moore walked to
the- plate. Everyones was watching
young Myer substituting for Bluece
at third base. After Ferguson ad
tossed up a few balls to Ruel, Fergu-
son wound up for the first pitch
Moore got a walk. The wind was
blowing the dust around the field.
The Pittsburgg were waiting Fergu-
gon out Ferguson hit Carey with a
pitched ball, the ball striking him on
the shirt. Cuyler sent up a high fly
to Goslin, who almost dropped_ the
ball. It was hard to gauge it in the
high wind. Barnhart hit inte «
Gouble play. Peck to Stan Harris to
Judge. No rons;-no~-hits, no errors
Senators—The dust was worrying
the infieTders, blowing into thelr eyes
The game waa held tp while some
belated spectators were taking their
Places in the field boxes. Rice hit
the first bal] and was -thrown out,
Traynor to Grantham. The Senators
apparently were bitting the first. ball.
Harris tried to bunt. Harris sent a
foul into the field stands.-The cus-
tomers got another ball for a> aou-
venir. Carey took in Stan Harris's
LL eee
Belle Eilers, Téacher of Rlocution,| TOO LATE TO ‘CLASSIFY
Acting, Public. Speaking. Pupil} .won- untae
medal at Provincial Festival. Tele- FE HED front bedroom, use of kit-
eee
. 9 light, phone: private home; sult
phone 63941, s gitie or married couple
Apply 218 Kingston Street. 373
Was
The Princess Maquinna will leave
| Victoria at 11 p.m. on the ist, llth
and 21st of each month. Effective Ov-
tober 1. Ses
2b.; Carey, c.f.;
NOW Is the Time to Buy
ITALIAN PRUNES
CRABAPPLES
and PEARS
®
For Preserving Purposes
+~_+ +
| Winter Schedule to Gulf Islande—
|The 8s. Otter will leave Victoria
jevery Monday at 7.15 am., régurning
jto Victoria Tutsday evening and
leave again every Wednesday at 8
\a.m. for Ganges Harbor, proceeding
jto Vancouver Thursday, and return-
ing arrive Victoria Saturday after-
noon . eee
+ + &
| €lectric Washing Compound is su-
| Dreme for woolens, 750 Yates St, °**
ne}
Jack Findler and his Princess
| Marguerite orchestra are back | in
see “Music as you like it, when
you ike it.” Phones 2101 or 170¢Y¥, ***
+ + +
| Back to Pre-War Price—The Fam-
y ily Herald and Weekly Star, the best
en 5s 1 | home paper in Canada, only one dol-
j lar per year. Phone 4743L. Big cash
Boys’ Black Heavy | prizes for readers
toecaps, strongly |
Datr
St
oor
a a
Mies Winifred Tunley, experienced
ser (formerly of David Spen-
} cer hnirdressing parlors), has opened
| parlors at 308-9 Campbell Bullding
| Phone 971. ase
_SHINGLES |
which have never been in salt water.
Prices right. Inspection invited.
Leigh’s Mills Ltd.
Phone David St,
> *
Mary McCoy Jameson, soprano, in
“recital” Memorial Hall, I3th - inst
Tickets $1, plus Government tax, at
| Fletcher Brom’ and Welter Fh
Evans Limited. Music teachers can
secure a limited number at reduced
rates for bona fide pupils. eee
+
HAVE
two buat
4 rent
20.
iNEW LIFE IN Your ia
ADIO TUBES
Radio Tubes revived by the latest
system, 50c each
Western Canada Radio Supply
‘ Limited
Gi Fort Street. Phone 1949
‘ Opposite Terry's
” THE CORPORATION OF THE
DISTRICT OF SAANICH
NOTICE
Re Voters’ Liet:
D Notice is liereby given that all-per-
| sons who desire to vote as “House-
-$4.00] | holders” must—pay—their-Road— ana
a) Poll_Tares—and-file the necessary
$ pAeelaration with—-the-wndersigned on
Kini! . { :
Ouistls City: Limit
JAMES LEIGH 8ON'S-
3 SLUMBER MILL
. Phone 397
CORPORATION OF THE CITY ‘oF
VICTORIA
Tenders s for Fence
MILLWOO
Good Fir Wood, per cord .......
inside Fir Wood, per -cord.
Biab Wood, per cord
per cord...
#8 at the Royal Ath-
Specifications m be ob-
tained at the office of the Bullain Tn-
A certified cheque for per
spector.
he amount of the
he Sist day of October, | bormpenp eels cesaee eurer, Thue em
RT towent
> h— e f BAY tOHGer not steariiy_soveptes.
R. R. F. SEWELL, S. MICHELL,
&.
C.M.C, wv Hall, Victoria Be. Got 1935.
or before t
GOPG LLL
.
NOS SONS RTT
~The Attorney-Genefal of British |
The strategy of Manager Harris-
malady, —belleved —induced+toird in_the sixth —tInihe ninth the}
——— = = —snsmane ess
enon eee me a we
A
sig Suietesbeeemnaleiaael 4 teeny see
flys The home folks called 6n the
“Goose” for a home run, Kremor
worked a slow ball on Goslin. Goslin
struck out on & passed ball, which
Smith did not chase, and Goslin can.
cléar to second base The Pirates
Kicked vigorously, but to no purpose
he four umpires came in and had a
discussion near the plate, It’ was then
decided to send Goslin back to first
| base, being enly allowed one base on
the passed ball. Judge grounded out
to Grantham, urmassisted. No runs, no
hits, ho errore
SECOND INNINGS
~Pirates—The official scorer has
given an error as well as a parset
ball to Smith, Traynor got a three~
it to. ight. The ball got away.
| from J. Harris in the wind. Harris
| felt down trying retrieve the ball.
Wright up. Traynor scored on
| Wright's sacrifice fiy to GosHn, The
| Official storer has now decided that
Smith does not get an error. Grant-
{ham up. Peck made a remarkable
{catch of Grantham's pop fly, Smith
up. Peck took care of Simth‘s fly.
One run, one hit. no errors.
Senators——Jos— Harris up
Harris
on behalf of defendants and will be| Wa a strikeout victim, swinging hard |Grantham also struck out, mis
| for_hié third strike. Myer went. out,
Kremer to Moore tq Grantham. .Peck |
right and dropped. Peck’s easy fly.
Peck wént to wecond while Carey was
}recovering the ball. It was the first
Pirate error of the series. Ruel up.
Ruel watked of four bad ones. Fergu -
sonéfanned, missing a: wide curve for
the third strike. No runs, no hits, one
error. :
THIRD INNING
Pirates Kremer _ took .a_ third
strike with his -bat_on—hie—shoulder,
| Muddy Rue} took..Moore’s foul near
| the visitors bench: Carey up. Ruel
"took Carey's bunt and threw him out
} at first. No runs, no hits ,no errors
Senators—-Rice up. The Senators
were going after the first ball. Rice
singled over the middle bag and the
crowd was happy Stan Harris up.
Kremer tried to get Rice off first
Stan Harris sacrificed, Traynor to
| Grantham Goslin up “Come .on
Goose," cried the crowd. The goose
took. a heavy swing on a drop curve
Goslin flied out to Cuyler and Rice
raced to third after the catch. Judge
up. Rice secred on Judge's -two-hag-
ger along the right field foul lne
The crowd cheered and Mrs. Coolidge
clapped -her hands J. Harria up
Wright took J. Harri¢s grounder
and threw. wild to firet,- but Judge
was out-at the plate trying to score
Grantham to Smith. Qne—run,-two
hits,_one—error,-
FOURTH INNING
Pirates—Cuyler got a two-base hit
to left centre
} left. fleld.
throw-in
Traynor
Barnhart singled into
Cuyler scoring On--the
Sarnhart reached second
us is warming
Traynor awalked
took Wright's
grounder and threw him—out-at first,
Barnhart going to third and Tr aynor
to second. Grantham up. The Was
ington infield was in on the gras
Grantham popped to Judge Fergu-
son worked the screw ball on Grant
ham-—Smitt up. ‘The Senators’ in
field was playing ba now Smith
walked. Kremer up Kremer fanne |
ed |
and everybody i in glee
run, two hits errors
_Senatore—Myer swung at s batt
way inside. Myer got a walk. The
Pirates kicked but the umpire
them back to their positions. Peck
up. Kremer tried to pick Myer off
first. Peck forced Myer Wright
Moore. Ruel up, The Senators tried
the hit-and-run play but Ruel failed
to connect Peck out stealing, Smith
ta Wright lt was the hit-and-run
and agate Roel -tatiet rene ie
Barnharttook in Roetstiy—No+run :
no hits, no errors |
| FIFTH INNING
The weather
Pirates—Moore up
grew colder as the game went on
Moore struck out,
ata ker ball
led = strike
second
two
| held
ho One
Carey kicked on a
Carey singled over
bases, when
the ball
Washingtor
Ri
® momentarily
Carey caught the
asleep on his hit
Myer threw out Cuyler, Carey going
}to third Myer made a pretty p!
on Cuyler's yoller. Barnhart
out to Judge. No runs, one hi
errora
Senatore—Ferguson
hia second strikeout
rolter to third for his secon
tapped a slow ball, driving it into the
ground No play was made to get
him, Stan-Harrts hit {nto a double
play, Moore to Grantham Harris’
liner went 1 t at Moore and Moore
had no trouble disposing of
who aas on his way to second
hit, no errors
SIXTH INNING
Pirates Traynor up. Rice took
Traynor’s long hit as it was about to
#0 into the centre field bleachers, the
crowd breathed a sigh of relief.
Wright up. Peck
| Sr6under and threw wide to first. it
was Pock’s fourth error of the series
Grantham up Ruel almost picked
Wright off at first. Grantham whif
fed, swinging for his third strike,
Smith singled into right and Wrignt,
by fast running made. third, getting
in ahead of J. Harris's throw. Kremer
up. Wright scored on Kremer's hit
which took a mean hop past Harris
Smith stopped at second Moore
walked and the bases were filled with
two.out. Carey up @arey struck out,
and was thrown out at first, Ruel to
Judge. One run, two hits, one error.
Senators—Goslin up, The crowd
cried for a rally. Kremer was pitching
}@00d ball, mixing up hia curves with
hia fast ball. Goslin kissed one into
the right field stand-for a homer. It
Was 4 terrific smash. He hit a,fast
ball, up near the end of his bat. It
was bis second -hit. of the series
Judge sent up a fly to Carey ‘who had
tough going to get it In the -wind.
Joe Harris singled past Moore Myer
: Owl, swinging weakly at-a fast
club
iy
led
no
‘
fanned. it js
No.
runa, one
ball. Peck singled tnto left, Harris
stopping at second. Ruel up. Traynor
took Ruel’s roller and touched third.
One run, thres hits, no error.
SEVENTH INNING
Pivates—The— Bieacherites_- gave
Goslin a cheer when he went into left
field, Cuyler up. Peck ‘took Cuyler’s
grass-cutter and thréw him out.
Bartihart up. Gosiifi took Barnhart's
fly after a long run. “Traynor up,
Traynor sent up a little fly to Stan
Harris. No
rore.
Senators—Liebold tatting for Fer-
gubon. Liebold up. Kremer
Smith went over to Manager
Kechnig to discuss Liebold’s batting
weakness. Lichold * a ‘little man
runs, no hits, no er-
and
and hard to pitch to.
on four pitched balls, 2
Neely ran-for Liebotd.— It was
it-and-run play and McNeely was
early —to-second when Rice fouled
the ball. “HarnWart made a beautiful
slebold walked
} catenh of Rice's seemingly safe hit and
MeNeely had to rate back to first.
Stan Harris scratched an infield hit
toward third, It was his first bit of
ss
; the series.
to |
Carey stretched his single to |
Rice beat cut a!
Hit, he}
Rice, |
took Wright's |
Me: |
Rice ug. Me-|
mre
McNeely stopped at sec- 1
ond on the hit. With Goslin up the
Crowd war cheering for more runs. |
Goslin hit a long foul to right. The
tone trent etree CHTCNTE TRS
Pirate infield fast asleep, Traynor
was flat on his feet. Judgeup. Mc-
| Neely. scored; on Judge's ‘sacrifice
j tly to Carey. -)Stan Harris held sec,
ond and Carey threw to third. Joe
| Harris went after. a bali on-the out-
| side of the plate. Stan Harris scored
jon Joe Harris’ single to left, Goslin
|- stopping at ond Piverybody was
l howling for .the old ratty." Myer up
|} Smith went out and took Myer's
splash-and touched him out on the
base iine.. Two runs, three hits, no
érrors. u
EIGHTH INNING
1 Pirates—Umpire MeCormick ruled
|that Myer was out being hit by a
Fdatted ball. Smith picked up the ball
and tonched him. McNeely Was sent
| into centre field for’ Washington*and
} Ries into right. Wright up. ._Marberry
is now pitching for the champtons, j
\Wright struck out, his third strike |
tbeing on a fast curve. Grantham up
|Marberry ‘was using -a fast hook
{drop curve for the third strike.
stop of his hard hit ball which was
} about to Ko-inte the-bleachers...Jt was
jone of the most remarkahie catches}
jever seen in a world's series game!
j Tt duplicated tn brilliance the catch
;Of Harry Hooper in one of the Boston!
Red. Sox games in 1915. No-r ns, no
Kits, no errors, :
Senators—The Pirates claimed Rice
aid not -eatch the batr Bit Tihpire |
Peek up}
| Rigler- would not allow it.
| ‘Fraynor made easy work of Peck's
; hopper, getting Nini at first
| singled over Wright's head.
|
Mar-
| Rice up. He was-¢iven an ovation
President Coolliige’ joined in the_#p-
Dlause. Wright threw -out Rice at
first. No runs, one hit, no errors.
NINTH INNING
Pirates—Rigbee batting for Kremer.
Bighee flied out toe McNeely, -Mc-
Neely maiie a nice catch. ‘Madore up
Moore a single over
Carey Some
the field from theright—tield—bie
ere-and were sent back again. Carey
singled into right, Moore - to
third. Cuyler was hit by “@
ball and the bases were file iL B
hart up. The ball hit Cuyler on the
left-arm. “A doctor went to look Cuy-
ler’s arm over and f him
right Bernhart——poy
Praynor- tied ty Ate
two hits, no errors.
STEPHEN JONES STARTS
NEW STORE BUILDING
(Con
h-
all
Ruel
fins,
tinued from page 1
STARTED BOOM IN 1907
Real
siderable interest
Jones had
campaign they that
was Mr. Jones who started off the
teet—renits—itmt—tusiness— boom tr
Victoria burly ty
estate men
the
halled with
news t
embark on at
as
years
|
Be
sent |
k
TIME FOR OTHE
It was also
estate men t
RS TO FOLLOW
pointed ou
YT
swinging futilely |
}
|
the new
Dinsmore
bee mpleted, w
}of Yates and Quadr
; Started on the He B
will cover a full bl
‘he adra betwern
| Red's Service
leased one
MORE BUILDINGS PLANNED
Poll
ywing the news « nes
j building came the announcements te-
j}day that plans have been order
}for the erection of three 4
fapartment buildings,
considerable size
TWO MANITOBA BOYS
f Mr. J
res!
one of them of
(Continued from page 1)
immediately
the
Police were
cated with an
heavy patroels—concentrating in—the
St. Agathe-Silver Piains 4 strict yes
terday mort Twelve.
the first the jail breakers were
en route to the jail. here
NO SHOTS FIREO
Although known
| criminals expected
battle, Sts n and his ¢
captured without the firing of a shot
}-When police officers “theartened to
fire the straw stack they surrendered
without a fight. The were un
armed when captured.
TO RECEIVE $3,000
The youths, sons of Vonet
do. probably will receive the
feward of $3,000 offered for the
capture of the men.
After ninety hours of liberty, the
prisoners were under héavy guard in
their célla in the provincial police jail
here to-da¥ while police continued
their search for Archie Mackenzie
and “Doctor” A. T. Blakes, called “The
King of Fakirs;". who escaped at the
same time as the three recaptured
men
HAD NINETEEN CENTS
When searched at the police head-
quarters here, Stanton and hia com-
panions had only nineteen cents be-
tween them.
Aastalias Tabor
Party is Opposing
coromuni
as
ip
i
were
men
|
Migration Pact |
Sydney; Australia, Oct. 10 (Can-
adian Press Cable via Reuter's)—
Outlining the policy of the Australian
|} Zabor Party for the benefit of the
} @lectors in the coming Federal gen-
j eral election campaign, Matthew
| Chariton, Labor leader, stated. to-
day Labor would.not endorse such an
lagreement as the Angto-Australian
| Migration pact, but would furnish
} the emplarment guarantees provided
jin it to Australians in preference to
settlers from overseas: bor, he
[rata, atood for national defence. bul
woukl abolish compulsory training .if
i returned to power; —~ .
oo
} by
} Mount
War robbed of a home run by Rice, |
to quash the)'Up. “ Carey walked threefeet to his | Who-madé wu wonderful floved hand¢
Ruel}
berry sacrificed, Smith to Grantham. |
TO RECEIVE $3,000)
manhunt started, |
rs after
CITY LAND SALES ~
GROW IN NUMBER|
(Continued = ,
Since the
record._on M
favoring un all around. increase in
price_Jevels there have _b@en con-)
stant Inquiries ut the-City Malas to |
prices in.all parts of the city. Interest |
seems to be well distributed, > the]
record sales showing that properties}
sold) since May, have been located |
as follows:
Business area, sixteen« properties
61d; Fairfield state, ten proper-
ties; James Bay district, foug- sales
snd. the remainder scattered from |
Victoria "West tothe Oak Bay
boundary. :
Suprorting the ecity’s,experience of
bettered realty conditions,’ tire pro- |
minent real estate agencies report |
inany ingtiiries for well located pro-|
perties, special interest being mani- |
fested in. modern bungalows_ and
homes of moderate size. The interest
in apartment buildings is indicated
the re-sale yesterday of the}
Douglas: Apartments for}
$40,000 to'H. J. Saunders, J. Ex Ham-|}
Inond, ie vendor, had held tie pro-
perty for.the past year, having*made
the purchase for $35,000 shortly after
arriving from Caigury to make his}
home In Victoria.
P. E. Cowper has commenced con-}
struction’of a six-reom frame stuc co |
residence at 39. Howe Street, and |
Was this mornifg’ granted a pefmit!
ae
a8
——
page 1)
went on.)
last, sot
-Council
evening
j for the building, the valuation belhg |
j stated al §$2;800.
The lote was pur-|
ebased from the cit recently
Downtown busines’ premises in
Process of improvement include the
Stobart Pease Hlock, where James
Maynard is expending $2,125 on a
hew store front, and the Hart Benn
Block, which ts being renovated and}
recohstructed at a cost of $2,445. The
Lemon Gonnason Company this!
morning took out a permit f extend}
their storage sheds in the mill dis
trict at a cost of $1,000.
FOOTBALL RESULTS
|
IN OLD COUNTRY
London, Oct. 10—Footbait eames to-
| day resulted as follows
| ENGLISH LEAGUE—FIRST
= “DIVISTON
Arsenal 2, Bolton Wanderers 3.
Birmingham 3, Cardiff City 2,
Blackburn 8, Magchester City 3.
Bury 3, Tottenham 0.
| rd i 2, Burnley 1
| B ‘ity 1, Aston Villa
, Leeds United 1
United 2, Newcastle
Ps
Manchester
nited
s
and 7, Everton 8 «
West Bromwich Albion 2, Sheffield
nited |
West Ham United 1, Notts County 0
ENGLISH CEAGUE—SETOND a2
DIVISION P
3 flapton Orient
"helwes
0, Bradford City%,
m N.E. 1
0
Wednesday
1. Portsmouth @
3 Swansea
thampton 0, Barnsley 0
kport 1, Middiesborough
e City Wolverhampt
“ENGLISH CEAGUE—THi
DIVISION
Southern Section
t Cit 3; Brentford 0
Rovers 2
Sgham 0, Chariton -A. 0
n Town 1, Exeter City
hyr Town 0, Rour
wall 4, Northampt
Newport County 1, Reading
rwich City erdare
.0.|
st
=
rystal Palace 6.
A
Swindon
Ss b t Lpited 4, Br
: and
Hove
ighton
Northern. Section
Wrexham
Stanley 0.
outhport 0
Hartlepool
United @
Wiganboro 0, Doncaster Rovers o.
SCOTTISH LEAGUE—FIRST
DIVISION
. hot played.
Hamilton
} arts-4, Cowdenbeath 8
Kilmarnock 8, Airdriconians 2
Motherwell 3, - Falkirk. 0
Partick Thistle 2, Rangers 0.
Raith Roverg 1, Dundee 0
Clydebank L
+] orton 0,
a
\Outlook Brightens
| For Northern Mines
On More Gold News
Stewart, B.C. Oct. 3.—(By Mail)
~The Portland Canal News says that
River near the Marmot Metals
j this is always the quiet time of the
|
as they have,” says the News “By |
|offer the. best speculative ‘invest-
When active eperations start on
there are rumors in town of a Spec-
tacular gold strike on the Marmot
property
} “By past -records ft appears that
yeur and it has been a surprise that}
fare stocks have stood up as well
the amount of ore being shown up,
} some .of the properties of this district |
| merits now open to the public in the
) mining world. :
“the Dewey oe mach heer level tet
looked for th this steck, and as con-
tinued developments on. the Dunwell,.
naturally ove up veins that. have
| beén traced into surrounding proper-
) ties, a mruch stronger market is ex-
| pected tn most of the Glacier Creek
group.”
(CHURCH DECLARATION
Oklahoma City, Okla. Oct; 10. —
| The international Convention
| Disciples of ‘C4rist went on record
bere Jate yesterday as strongly sup-
borting € demand that missionaries
of the chureh practice tmmersian in
foreign. fields. By a Vote estimated
at five ta one, the conve
the
om the peace Confer -
demand that immer-
sior be hell essential to miasio:
work
- eS ST
watqn acceso
Il
Allied- statesmen to-day approved on
second
j tiona Will be the subject of private
ME OF GERMANY'S |
UINING LEAGUE TO
BE DECIDED SOON,
“FORVTORIA
Conditions Will be Discussed | “All Well on Board”? _Wire-
at Locarno Conference
Next Monday _ &
Majority of Points in Draft}
European Security Pact |
Given Delegates’ Approval. |
Locarno, Oct: 10—The German and}
lesses Her Master, Capt.
Horichi .
Inbound from the Oriést _on
regular sailing the N.Y.K.: lyo
Maru was reported in Capadian wite-
leas as 2,000 miles off at 8 p.m. yes-
terday She wit dock here on the
morning of October 15, according to
advices in the hands of her’ Jocal
| agents
On. board ts a lght tonnage for
| local discharge and some mails. Her
Passengér accommodation ia not
chenvily taxed; the experience of ait
the conditions | lines at this season of the year when
of Germany's entrance into the! Westhound: travel is--light. She
Léague of Nations, and “setond, carries in Canadian mati. twenty-
France's Special guarantee -for.Po- | eight. bags of letter mail, thir
land. ‘ seven bags of parceiz—and—etever
Another suggestion, Informally ad-|bage for the seaplane service, to be
vanced, is that the Pertinent Court | put ashore here: : Rant
of international Justice be fequested “All _welt-on board.” states Capt.
to Interpret Article 16 of the Cove- | Herichi, in a wireto her local agents,
in reference tothe anti-cHolera re+
strictions which .¢2nt-inte effect a
little time ago.
réadin
Points in the
ity pact, but- lef
next Monday the two main outetand-
Ing questions—tirat,
9 @ majority of the
draft European secur-
ft for consideration
»
announced tothe
that she}
curity pact
the-same capacity |
These two ques- |
security confere
would Sign the
AS & #uarantor tr
as Great Hritain
V 2562
McCLOY & COMPANY
AUCTIONEERS
conference®” over the weék-end
Article 16 provides
tive action-by members of the League
of Nations inst any aggressor
state and Winds the members to per-
mit Passage of troops through their
territory in furtherance of military
action against an¥ such aggressor
guunos KEEP onpen SALE. TUES
PIRI AS STRKE 3215 Faeon tr
EFFORTS WRE MADE" BagaloFortare
Communists Urge Cessation
of Work as Protest Against And Good Ford Touring.
Moroccan War
Transport Workers Respond
to Call; General Strikeis
Planned For Next Week —
Paris, Oct
ernment is ta
order in
a general
munists In
in Morocco
for _co-opera=
SALE TUESDAY -_
10.—The. French Gov-
& Measures to insure
view of imminence of
trike arr ged by Com-
protest against the war
At the conclusion at
& meeting of the heads of all
organizations, yesterday it was off
cally annownced that “any attempts
to interfere with men desiring to
continue work against strike or-
ders would be energet§cai re-
pressed.
_ The Republican Guards. the Serrary
OF ail #trikers, will patrol the streets
CURTAIN-RAISER
The Communist transport
workers of the Paris region were
called out to-day in what is re-
garding as a curtain-raiser. Early
this afternoon the mo ment had
apparently made littié headway,
although two or three auto bus
lines were operating with reduced
staffs: >
The genéra! to
have been fixed for-next Wednesday.
The “Moscowteers,” as the Commun-
The “afosoowicers” Sa ne commun Fave Chicken Houses,
In-the trades fons and thelr appeal}
of Mrs. Norman
to the workers is not expected to}
meet With gFenéral response, r ers, | ors,
sband was en the
same operating tat giving his blood |
to save her life Varley has
given |
two transfusions, and jt is expécted.!
his wife,
wit ir aattrine toe sep" | L912 Ford Touring Car
Uc polsoning due to a birth,-wilt-+e-
cover Particulars Later
ALE. WEDNESDAY
At Mr. Ballantyne’s Ranch
v2
at
ty
Feltham Road (just off Shelbourne
Street)
HOUSEHOLD -
strike is reported
Toronto, Oet. 10
here amputated one
Varley's legs, herb
While surgeons
}V 2564
SALE THURSDAY
At 1.30 p.m.
Large Quantity
Household Furniture
And Miscellaneous
Effects
In Our Auction Halls
Corner Pandora and Blanshard
Streets
Sais No. 1930
STEWART WILLIAMS & CO.
AUC TIONFERS
Duly instructed by
ental Trading Co. will sell by
Auction at the
Carter Oriental Art Store
706 FORT STREET
Tuesday
o'clock
The Carter Ort
Publle
a
’ Oct. 13
and again at
A Unique Collection of
British India Rugs
which means a sale of RUGS suitable
for al] @lasses of Homes, from the
Cottage to the more pretentious Resi
dences. They are hand-madé Woolen
Rugs, noted for their Wearing Quality
and Classy: Appearance, the bulk of
these Rugs are Mirzapores, in- smalt
sizes such as 3ft. by 6ft.. 24ft. by
oft., 4ft. by 7ft., Oft. by oft, suitable
for Halls, Bedrooms, Living Rooms
Libraries, etv.; aleo they. will offer
the well-known Woolen -Numdahs.
These are made of the famous Tibet
tian Wool and embroidered in Kash-
mir, and area} clean up.of Nippon
Cotton Bath Stain Jute Rigs, ete.
All pf the above 200 pieces will be
cleared at the bidder's ownprice’ to
make room for Christmas stock
It time permits they will offer:
One Fine Persian Kasak, 3ft. tin by
Tit. 3in. -
One extra fine Indo Persian, 3ft.
fin. by 6ft. Sin
One Persian Kurd, 4ft. Sin. by 6ft
Tin
One Antique Bokhara’Gheljm, 6ft,
Sin.-by lift
On view, all
above nddress,
For further particulars apply to
“The Auctioneer
410 and 411 Sayward Bldg. Phone 1324
il 2 o'clock
at
Note—Gnods recelved or sent for y
to 10 a.m. Thursday ‘
~ SALE. SATURDAY.
Livestock at
the Market _
As Usual at 11 am.
day. Monday at the Further. Particulars trom_
THE AUCTIONEERS
_ MLO & CONRAN
Phone 1431
_ VOTERS? LIST CHARGES
. HEARD D IN TORONTO
“Toronto; Oct, 10 Five persons
charged with ‘perjury, arising out of
affidavits made and filed béfore the
registrar of the riding of Toronto
Gentre West in connection with re-
moval of names from the voters’ list,
appeared in police court yesterday.
and were remanded until October 16
HM. C. Hocken is the Federal Con-
Servative candidate in the consti-
tuelicy, and fs opposed hy “Josep
Singer, Eiberal. The former alleges
the. names -of 1,500 qualified voters
were struck off the lst, while, Mr.
Singer declares. he- welcomes “an
opportunity .of Placing before the
public the conditi6n in which the
voters’ Hist now stands.” -
| ITALIAN CHANGE
Nome, Oct. 10.—Mussolints Cabinet
took another important step yester-
day in the Fascist section of Italy
by deciding to revive and modernize
a medieval form
}¢mall municipalities of 6,000 Inhabi-
tants or leas, by the appointment by
the central government of “podestas,”
thus étiminatng the present sVateni
4f government by mayors —eleéted
locally.
Stonewall
The Old
Javorite
7 ms:
Wi,
Manufactured by Genera! Cige
of government fpr: |.
+ Company United,
IMPERIAL TOBACCO COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED, Sele
VICTORIA DAILY TIM
MAN IN ONTARIO IS
CHARGED WITH MURDER
‘ =
Cobalt, ‘Ont., 16—Sought by
the police for more than eighteen
months in-connection with the slay-
ing of Joseph LaSalle on April 21.at
Island Falls, forty-three miles north
of Cochrane, Nick Pashton has been
captured in the country between the
end of the Temiskaming and North-
ern Ontario Railway and James Ba
according to word eived here ye
terday from the Far. NoPthy A“ eor-
stable of the R-CALP. is- said” to
have made the arrest.
Oct
‘| mandate of the Lit
Distriteters
Dont Play
), Blind Man's
In Choosing a Heating Plant
T. secre be
O me it is surprising the way some
people buy heating
One would think they
were playing a game of Blind Man's Buff
They are very much in the dark about
the merits of the many different makes of
furnaces made
wide open eyes.
It is the most important factor in
the home during six months of the year.
Everything depends upon the heating plant
whether.these six months are months of
cold misery or warm comfort.
The first,-and most important, thing to
do when selecting a hot water system,
to select one with a reputation for giving
good service
Second, to select the right size furnace
for your home.
Third,
style of radiator for each
Fourth, to have the heating plant prop-
erly installed,
in Canada.
around among them, finally make a stab at
it, and trust to luck on grabbing a good one.
A heating plant should be chosen with
to choose the
plants for their
years.
They grope
for saving fuel,
the heat.
As regards the first, I respectfully sug-
gest that there is no hot water system with
a better reputation than the Gurney.
Gurney Furnaces have. been heating
Canadian homes satisfactorily~ for
fifty
They stand the test of time, adding
to a sterling reputation year by year.
When you chdose a Gurney you get a
hot water furnace with tried and proven
features, such as the Patented Economizer
the grates in easy-to-shake
sections, the ash pit large and roomy, and
the fire pot with overhanging walls to catch
_ As regards the second, third and fourth
things, the men who sell and install Gurney
Systems are competent to give and do give
you a careful, satisfactory installation job.
I would be pleased to mail you a book-
let that tells all about the many features of
the Gurney Hot Water Systems or to give
you any other help you require:
right size and
room,
booklets.
You'll find the coupon below handy for
sending in a request for any: of our many
Yours sincerely,
eee ne RES a9 oe Tissteed
Electric
Range
Fiot Water
Radiators.
Heating.
Ho Poa
P.S.—The men who sell
and install Gurney
Appliances back w
fine products with
good service.
The Gurney Foundry Co“,
Limited,
566 Beatty Street
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Toronto, Winni,
UVER, 8
* Water Heaters .--
iatre
Water Heater - i d)
ES,
UNITY IS NOW
1G QUESTION
CANADIANS
Most—tmportant--1ssue--in
General Election, Premier
King Says in | Winnipeg
Prime Minister States Prairies
to Have Four. Representa-
| tives in. Cabinet
Winnipeg,; -Oct. 10— Unity
throughout Canada was declared
the most important issue in the
| Federal general élection by Pre-
| mier King in-anSaddress at ‘a
| meeting here _last_ night which
was the last in-bis=tanrUt the
} prairies.
Mr. King stated that if the
people on Oetober 29 renewed the
al Party he pur-
posed. to have the prairie region rep-
resented by four men in the Cabinet.
He hoped to add T. C, Norris, Mani-
toba, and Han. ©. A. Dupning, now
Premier of Saskatchewan, to the two
already In the Cabinet, Hon. W, R
Motherwell of Sesekatchewan, “and
Hon, Charles A. Btewart, Alberta.
IMMIGRATION POLICY
Th» Premier announced a Vigor-
ous immigration -poticy directed by &
minister giving his whole time to the
work But the immigration would
not be indiscriminate. It would have
regard for quality as well as quan-
Above all
front the ¢
questions which) cows
snadian people,” declared
Mr. King, “that of Canadian unity ts
by all odds the most important—how
we can-aet as Canadians first,
Canadians. last and Caffiadians al-
ways.” ..
Canadian
clared, on
liament of
heat
depended, he de-
resentation in the Par-
anada, which included
represetation in the Government and
the Importance of the polictes that
might be enacted
walty
lectors of Manitoba
pr airies a greater voice tn
affairs by returning Lib
the House of Commons on
to she
the
relations
Progres
turned
Jberals with
att, “pubitety
eo-operation wit
f large Aagiber
tidfarly
of a
es nd pa
Ry that ©co-opera-
Iped to get the ma
1 get. Put in many. par-
were embarrassed be
jovernment
Pont Trrerstrre i treet ee et
til, we into Ho what at-
titude —ressives going
to take.”
His WAR WORK
In
“2,
we the ise
were
in-the-audi~
Mr. King’s
the Premier
answer to a man
who asked about
record in the Great War
said
I shall be
recora— with
proud to compare my)
his. I shall be proud
ho compares it. with apy..mano's.
man finds himself face to
with obligations at all times In
history of his country, When the
War came J, like all
had my obligations to
othes
in the
There
against this |
Mr. King
sider‘my d
iS
States heckle
was an ‘otest
ter
“lL had to con
ity father who
a brother with tuber
ad two children dependent upon
a sister with her Heart fail
to a mother with
to care for I said to my
jeave- all these obligatio#ia and I
go to London 2 posi-
to a waa
to ulosis
no
her
ean
SATURDAY
-tthe Sidney
tion In some office over yonde I
was forty years old. They would not
jet tie at-that ag@ £0 Into the
trenches. T sald: ‘I leave all this
or I can do my duty as I see it as a
son, brother one of whom
great responsibilities rest.”
SETTLED DISPUTES
Mr. King outlined his work on la-
bor questions, adding “that when war
broke oyt, he it he could deyote
his special knowledge of labor con
eiliation in furthering production of
war materials.”
He thought—that—to- cone
boredisputes In war industr
be rendering the largest pogsit
vice he could render He described
the work he had done in this con-
nection tn the United. States for the
Bethlehem Steel Company, the Beth-
lehem ship building, the General
Flectric Company and the Colorade
Fuel and Iron Company, all engaged
in furnishing supplies for the Allies
The presidents of these concerns had
informed him the services he had
been able to render in settling their
labor disputes had helped: them give
the maximum service in supplying
war materials.
MEIGHEN MENTIONED .
“What did Meighen do in the
asked a man.
“THe took a portfolio,” Called another
“T think Mr. Melighen did hia full
duty in the light in which he saw it,”
sharply added the Premier, and ap-
pianeg broke out
In answer to a question wbout the
radio activities of the Cagadian Na
tional Rattways, Mr. King said it was
all right in the eyes of some people
for the Canadian Pacific Railway to
advertise, but it was_all wrong for
the Canadian National to ge after
business
“People have *to know,” he added,
*“fhat there are two railways tn Can-
ada instead of one."
ADVISORY TARIFF BOARD
Mr. King sketched the proposed
powers of the Tariff Revision Board
and what the Government had done
to stimulate trade by concluding
treaties with” France, Australia and
the West Indies. He referred to Mr.
Meighen's British preference pro-
Posais as in effect saying to Great
Britain:
“You musttax yourselves with -«
tatiff-and then cut a hole for us in
your tariff wall or we will not give
you preference.”
“my opinion. *
as a 4S
iMate la-
would
» ser-
war?
exclaimed Mr
King, “this pronosal would hav¢. the
same disinteerating effect on the Em-
prs as THIS Wisiness of high protec-
Lon. would} Ss nthe whgle. De-
a
minton of Ca
Mr, King d¢clared Mr; Meighen,
a
Sid
Special to The Times j
Sidney, Oct..10.—The War Mem- |
orial Park trustees recently: held @
meeting at which it,'was decided to
take” over the Children’s”
Parke -
the North Sainich Women's Institute}
and the money handed over by the
Institute will be used for improv-
ing the grounds.
Tt was Also decided to drain the
other four acres.
To raise funds for this purpose it
wan arranged to give a dance’ on
Friday, October 23:
The regular~ monthly meeting of!
Board of Trade will be
held in Wesley Hall on Tuesday
Qstober 13..at K o'clock.
The Liberal Association has. taken
a store on Beacon Avenue for the
Booth committee room.
Paymaster Liéutenant J. Cossetto,
RCN, is bringing “a~ronvert party
from Victoria .on-October—33-to—the
Deep Cove social club hall “under
the auspices of the Deep Cove
Branch of the Navy League of Can-
ada,
Mrs Willlamson_of Hilliers is stay -
Ing with Mrs: MeNaught, °Fhird
Street
,
of Vietorta ts stay-
and Mrs. 8. Roberts.
Mrs. Norris of Downey
returned hime after a
in Seattle
Mrs.
ing. with
Carter
Mr.
Mr. and
Road have
heliday spent
_Mra. Simmonds of
en spending a few
and Mrs. Hiron, Deep
Victoria has
days with.Mr
Bay
Mrs Walesa of _Vantouver. Is
staying with her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brethour
East. Road.
Mrs. Birkland of Victoria has re-
turned home after spending a féw
days with Mre Campbell, the “Or-
chards.” ‘ .
Mr.—C. Ross_of Seattie has heen
staying with his brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mra... Davis, Swarts}
Ray.
Nelson
have left}
will re-
Mre. Musgrave and Mr
Musgrave of Swartz Bay
for Victoria, wheré they
side
Margaret Thornton
visiting Victoria
Miss of
Deep |
is
Horth.' Mr. J.. Copithorne!
l. Horth have gone tol
for some shooting
Mr. B
nd Mp.
Courtenay
social club hetd their
weekly card party in Matthews Hall
There were = good number present
Winners of the first prises were
Mrs. Hambley, Mre. McKay, Mr. N.}
Fralich and Mr. G. Lioyd Supfher
ved. by lady members, |
there be no
The Sidney
will
apecial
he
}
'
(Special to The Times H
9.—-Although few
themselves of the | oppertunity, the]
‘Special Social” given under the aus-
pieéa of St. John's W_A. on Thursday
i
ranged by Miss Ch \ as ac-
companist, was exceptionally 2 dk con-
sisting of songs by Mrs W. Dobson,
Mra. IL C. Mann and R. C. Mainguy
and violin solos by J. Rurchett A few
tables of whist and bridge were made up |
and delicious refreshments were served
by mesnbers of the auxiliary
Duncan, Oct availed
Chemainus
Tuesday
entertained |
| the
Chemainus, Oct.” 10—On
last Mra. Douglas Ross
at the tea-hour at her home, Fuller's
Lake.. The floral decorations were
very pretty, nasturtioms, marigolds,
larkspur and clematis being used
most effectively
‘A very jolly time was passed with
tennis competition
The guests were eacn Kiven a typet
with blanks, which had to be
in
P. W. Anketel -Jones won
fiest prize, having filled in fifteen
blanks correctly Miss Trevenna;
carried off the consolation prize. A
delicious tea was. served by Mrs
Roas, who was ably assisted by Miss
McInnes and Mrs. Maurice Halhed
Mrs the |
Mrs. H. E. Knight was recentiy-a)
ten hostess, the tea table was taste-
fully decorated with. aster# and/|
Autumn leaves, her guests Included |
Mrs. R. B. Haliied, Mra. W. C. Cryer
Mrs. Douglas Ross and Miss Rase- |
mary Cryer |
Mr. ‘Toynbee has returned home to}
Salt Spring Island after a brief visit
with his brother and sister in-law, |
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Toynbee.
Mrs. Leonard Campbell of Eberts,
“Mrs. Douglas Fulten. =
| Beales
+pegiinr—menthiy—mesting.—Misetlola
} by ‘the
powilt
lbe the Misses Patricia
lafter
, OCTOBER 10, 1925
| HUNTER’S BULLET
CAME NEAR DRIVER
Nanaimo, Oct: 10. Dr. -R. B,
Dier of this city narrowly es-
Taped a-serions-aechtentwhtte-}>
motoring alone on a highway in
the Nanoose district, when a
rifle bullet, evidently fired by a
hunter, crashed through the
windshield of his car, strikjng. the
empty seat beside him,
Saanich, is visiting her father, 0. J
Monk for a week.
Mrs. PB. R.
home to Du
few days on
Roberts has returned
can after spending a
uper Istand
Miss Trevenna is the guest of her
brother-in-law and, sister, Mr. and
On Tuesday afternoon. the Can.
‘étien—Girle in- Training with their
leader, Miss Mary Robinson, . and‘
their counsellor, Mrs, E, M: Cook and
several , visitors, spent the afternoon
r Pgint beach, where“ they fad
Keating
Special to The Times
Keating, Oct. 10—-The annual meet-
ing of the Elk Lake Athletie Asad-
clation wha. held in the Temperance
Hall, Keating, on Tuesday évening
The president.. H. C. Oidfield,
ducted the meefing and- B.C
read the secretary's report
the financial statement
est was shown by
ing that turned
the club had
con
Amey
and gave
Great ‘inter~
the large gather-
out to hear what
accomplished during
the past xrar The - balance sheet
showed that. the assets of the club
had increased materially tn so far as
buildings are-concernéd If fadition
to a yery satisfactory, financia!
balance A big drive is being made
for new--members..and.. many« sug-
gestions were received to improve
upon the pest good work ofthe club
which the directors wilt meet- with
prompt attention, one bhetng the
formation of a select committee for
the purposee of carrying on Winter
sports, Very few changes were
made on the board of directors, Mr
of Royal Oak being ap
pointed president with H. C. Old
field the retiring president, re-
maining on directorate, W, Ker-
sey sident, B. C
Amey temr sécretary-treas
urer, while the directors are as fol
THWES Mea AOC. Ores i Rs
hinson, B. Grainger, Westohdale and
Mullin
was ele
The
South
Miss L
Ro
Junior Institute Girls Club of
Saanich met at the home of
lian Styan, Central Saanich
ad, on Thursday afternoon for the
and the cretary |
Batler, read the
previous meeting
attendance of
arrangements
concerts and
Lawrie presided
Miss Beatrice
minutes of the
There was a good
members and further
were made for the
dance—which {it was decided to hold
on Friday evening, November .13, in
the Temperance Hall A play, en
titled How He Proposed” is being
prepared and jf posalble..Charlie
Frent thestra will play for the
dance A rehearsal for the foncert
was held and at the conclusion of
tbe meeeting a dainty tea was served
hostess
se
The — monthly meeting —oft—the
Ladies’ Aid of the South Saanich
United Church was held in the church
parlor on Thursday afternoon with
a good attendance The president
Mrs. McClure, was In the chair and
secretary's report was read b)
Miss Deartng Accounts and busi
ness in connection with the Harvest
ri ert and social which was held
ently were. completed and the
balance after the expenses
pid preved very satiafactory.
rangements for-w sale of
cooking to be held in December are
in the hands of Rev. Mr. Lees, and
plans were comménc ed for another
concert to take- place é¢arly in the
New Year. At the next meeting of
the Aid to be held the second “Thurs
day in December, Rev Mr Lees
give an addreas
Miss May McCs has
home after spending the
months at Qualicum Beach
returned
Summer
arthy
The commitee in charge of the
enard party in the Temperance Hall
on Saturday evening, October wil
Gale, stelle
and Blanche
Gold, Beatrice Butler
Sherring
Miss Patricia Gale has
her home on. Stelly'’s Cre
visiting with Mr and
West Saanich Road
lin Blaine have re
turned to Seattle after a short visit
with Mr. Blatne’s parents, Mr, and
Mrs. Russell. Giles Road
returned
ms Road
Mrs
to
Cliffe,
Mr. and Mrs. (<
a
judging from his, own declarations,
had some scheme ot Piney recom
between the Canadian Pacific Rail-
way and the Canadian National back
of his mind
DARDANELLES INCIDENT
Referring “to the Dardanelles)
episode and the appeal sent to the
Dominions by the Lioyd George Gov-
ernment Mr... King. sald -that in ita
repiy, his Government had asserted
the doctrine of the supremacy of-Par-
lament. Mr. Meighen's attitude, on
the other hand, with hia “Ready, aye,
ready,” would, if it had been given
effect, have plunged the country into
another war. Mr. King declared he
had the assurance of British states-
men that the attitude of the Cana-
dian Government during that crisis
had had a steadying effect.
Mr. King agreed with Mr. Dun-
ning that there should be’ greater
western representation on the Rail-
way Commission.
Hion. G. H. Boivin, Minister of
Customs, said there had. not been
even a suspicion. of graft or scandal
charged against the Government by
the opposttion. The Government
stood before the people with absolute
clean hands.
Premier Dufning of Saskatchewan,
speaking of the share he was taking
in the Federal campaign, seid the
tapun raisedin_this-campaign—was of
more profound importance to West-
ern Canada generally than any single
fase raised “iy any PrOVINeIAT cam-
paign. This issue was the Conserva-
tive proposal’of an all-round increase
in the tariff.
Mr. Dunning held-that if the Rall-
way Commission were to be a na
tional tribunal it should be nationally
representative. One member out of
six was not sufficient representation
for the people of Western Canada,
He added that in the fixing of rall-
way rates in the East. the-maximum
mined by water competition
net were entitled to - such.
maximum.rates, then Western Can
nda war.entitied to the advantage
enjoyed under the Crow's Nest
Agreément
CANDIDATES NAMED
Ottawa, Oct. 10—Nominations for
the House of Commons have been
reported as follows
St. John-Albert, N.B
ter ana. T. Haves,
seats. a
East /Hamillton—John
Liberal.
West Hamilton
eral.
East Lambton,
rett, London, Liberal
East. Toronto—Dr.
rell, Liberal
Medicine
Farmer.
Bellechasse—Murdock
Conservative.
R: C. LARUIER CANDIDATE
Montreal, Oct, 10.—Dr. Ro ChiFIe#
Laurier, former SLP. for L’Assomp-
tion and cousin.o
Laurier, has announced he will be a
éandidate in the St. James Division
of Montreal. He will run as a Lib-
eral-Protectionist’ and will oppose
Ferrand Rinfret, Liberal,
WwW. E
Liberals;
Fos-
two
Newlands,
George-Gew, Lib-
Ont.—John R, Stir-
Harold = Far-
Hat—W. CC. MeDaniels,
Mackenzie,
‘seven me
the late Sir Wilfrid} de
Choose Your Knit
-U nderwear From Our
Well Asiorted
We Feature
Stocks
Such Well Known
Lad
Makes as
JAEGER; HARVEY'S, WATSON’S,
ZENITH, TURNBULL'S and _.
I. & R. MORLEY’S, OF LONDON,
ENGLAND
Angus Campbell & Co.Ltd.
1010 GOVE
ERNMENT STREET c
Chesterfields and Easy Chairs
See us for comf
iving upholstery
at reasonable
2 clean Carpets
ROBBERS MISSED
32,000,000 IN BONDS
Thugs Who Took Mail in Los!
Angeles Got Away With |
Only About $50,000 }
Los Angeles
robbers— which
up rail
with six
in full
Oct. 10.—A
Thursday
truck here
pouches of
of motorists
band of}
night held}
and escaped
registered mail
pedestrians
and car passengers allowed a
snail_tryuck—§ao—pass—which- was
carrying $2,000,000 in bonds and se-
curilies, investigating officers
vealed to-day
The cers believe band . of
n imtended to rob the heav-
iiy-laden truck, but through
#lip in their plans chose the following
truck, the roDbery ot whith Post
master P. P. O'Brien believes netted
them less than $0,000 contained
120. sagistered poooele .
YONG USERS OF
NARCOTICS JAILED.
|
lew
street
the
in |
Morfreal Oct 10 A “narcotic
‘club.”. whose members censisted
largely of s still in their ‘teens, )
was disbanded by police here yester
day afternoon. The ringleaders were
tried in the juvenile court and sen-
tenced to fall for periods ranging
from ‘six months to two years, on
charges of iegally possessing nar-
cotic. drugs. Ten ofthe sixteen
youths who appeared before Judge
Lacroix were let off with a severe
lecture, but the other-six- were sent
to prison
The “club” was
in & lane Tit the
a dilipidated shack
eastern section of
the city There, according tp their
own confessions, tie lads’ weré in the
habit of gathering to play cards,
drink smoke and take drugs |
Money for the herotmn, the printipal
drug, was obtained by petty criminal}
pursuits, “the boys admitted Some
of the club. members confessed
had been drug addicts for more
five years
Rene Larocque,
than
twenty-three, was!
admitted he was héad of the gang,)
was sentenced to two years. He told
the judge he had been a drug addict!
since he was twelye. Other sentences
were Vietor Ouilette, eighteen, one]
year; Lucient Gingras, twe one |
year; Komeo Grenier, eigh n, six
months; one lad of seventeen was/|
given -six-months and_another, under
sixteen, was sent to the reformatory
for three years
RAILROAD WORKER
ACCIDENTALLY. KILLED
Rirtle, Man., Oct
killed and three
gasoline handcar
riding jumped the
adian Pacific at
10.—One man was
injured when the
in which they were
rafla of the Can-
Little's Crossing,
three miles East of Foxwarren, last
night. ‘Stanley Wirtnta; twenty-four
of Oakburn, Man: was killed. The
cause of the accident was not ascer-
tained.
$iX GUILTY OF KILLING
San Rafael, Cal... Oct. 10.—The jury
which heard evidence in the trial of
six San Quentin convicts who were
charged with murder growing out of
the death of Branch Miller, a prison
employee, who waa killed during an
attempted escape, found the six men
guilty of second degree murder.
BREAO PRICE REDUCED
—
London, Oct. (0—The Bakers* Ag=
sociation announced last night the
brice of the quartern loaf would be
ninepence, begining Monday, ‘This
decision was due to the fall In the
price of flour.
CHARGE OF MURDER \
Montreal, Oct. Peden hearing evi-
nee_in. the . case —of— Sire seeaew
Grandchamp, whe died in 8 hospital #
‘few hours”
deep razor rn in her
rooming house in Juliett
MAN CHARGED WITH
in
disappeara
been
la
| Cottonwood,
lerty
| deeded last January to J. W. Larson}
realestate broker
charge
a
Halifax,
of Pt
of his wife,
| lish
uatody
prosequl
return of a
the gyand jury at the
Gammon
| police court with.murder on April TI
st year,
have
parents
Attempts
jh have béen havalling.
Redding,
perior
50M + Charles
Lots of patterna to choose
Patronize Home induatry thom
Phone 718 for Prices
MURDER IS FREED
Oct. 10.—Duncan Gamrhon
charged with the murder
sarah Gammon, an Eng-
. Was dismissed from
yesterday afternoon on nolle
proceedings, following the
true bill against him by
assizes here.
Wea. charged tn the ey
“tou,
war-b
connection with the © mysterious
nee of his wife, who. had
niiasing since September of
when she was supposed te
satled from Qutbec to visit het
in: Winford, Cheshire, Eng,
to locate the body ‘of, his
PROPERTY RULING
‘al. Oct.. 10—The
ordered returned © td
Mudleman, old soldier” o€
$15,000 worth of props
his entire possessions, which he
Sur
Court
Rem avtom bud} oom .
of obtaining ‘money under
false pretenses
Pimples and EGema Disap pear
the Shin Made Soft and Smooth
by Using
Dr CHASES
OINTMENT
Th
e On Furnace :
Mackay & Gillespie
Limited
1102 Douglas St. Phone 149
IOOOOO OOOO}
Thanks
To Good
due largely to those men who |
own the very splendid dairy
herds in the Ladner and eae es
ford districts.
There ts a constant and |
rival to stand
cxkaving
We only. keep this
ness,
———+.-.. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925.
-——...._____.,,...__. -
:
*fé France, Belgium, ete, .....+.. d+ hows
t ily Times
Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by
THE TIMES PRINTING AND PUBLISHING ©
COMPANY LIMITED :
Offices Corner Broad and Fort Streets
Business Office (Advertising) ..... .: Phone 1090
.. Phone 3345
.«. Phone: 45
Dirculation ...
BSCRIPTION RATES
.$1 per month
dlty delivery .. : i+ §t per. month
By mai! (exclusive of city)—Canada, Grea :
‘Britain and United States ....... = é
~ FARMERS COMING NORTH
F- PARTICULAR INTEREST TO
these Conservative politicians who are con-
tinually trying to impress us with their contention that
the Canadian farmer wants a protective tariff to enable
him to live and make a profit on his labors shouldbe
theofficial return of the’ number of agriculturists
“Who have come to this country from the United States .
during the: last two years. ‘This shows that in the
ear ending August 31, 1924, no fewer than 2,675
farmers left their holdings ist-the neighboring republic
and brought their goods and-chattels to Canada with .
—a~the intemion of becoming permanent residents and pro-
ducers of this country. It* also shows’ that for the
}welve months ending August 31, 1925, the number
following the example set by those who came. North:
in the previous year rose to 4,304. “Here are the de-
tails for both years, showing the territory from which
ur new citizens came, and the number from each
tection: 5 ‘
« Territory
Towa and Nebraska ....-.+-%- wevccseeer
Washington and Oregon .«
Michigan ‘ a30
yhio rirheik 134
ndiana ...... - q $0
Pennsylvania... 209
Biissourt and Kansay - 220
Western New York 157
A8@
2 811
Tiss and Wisconsin -. ay 84
Montana and Colorado 393
‘
* Total ....
1925
163
833
4,304
°°" Easily the most important point to be noted in
this connection is that all these farmers have come to
(Canada=and they continue to come, by the way—
ees the country which our Tory friends contend does
usiness! under an unbeatable system of high protec-
tion. But the funny part about the Conservative solici-
PE for the lot of the Canadian farmer is the fact that
Mr.-Meigher has not-a-single-supporter in“any of the
three-great- farming provinces of the West. And it
gan be’said with equal emphasis that there is not the
Slightest prospect of his obtaining any support from
ahose same provinces after the ballots have been
xounted on the evening of the twenty-ninth. In fact
She -tast-thing the-Canadian-farmer~wants~is—a~ high
“ariff. The figures quoted above likewise tell their
‘own ‘story and suggest that the United States farmer
‘is ready to take advantage of the: Canadian middle-
‘course _policy—a fiscal policy which has some regard
for the consumer. “
CANADA'S GREAT ACHIEVEMENT
LTHOUGH DEALING WITH CANADA
and Canadian conditions in a very general
sway, noting particularly, however, that Old Country
‘visitors to this Dominion are amazed that our people
‘should betray anything approaching pessimism, a
twriter in the current issue of The Round Table refers
pointedly to Canadian development problems—their
*relationship to the national outlook and the psycholo-
«gical effect of close proximity to a large and wealthy
;nation—and bespeaks their consideration when the
—subject of Canada’s contribution to Empire defence
is under discussion. Dismissing the suggestion that
sthere is the least danger of the political absorption of
‘this country by the United States; contending-that be-
cause we are “spiritually British" in institutions we
‘shall go remain a British Country, The Round Table
writer concludes in part as follows:
Alwaya.in-times of dullness and reaction there haa
been a tendency in Canada to look to the south, and
to wonder whether the maintenance ofa separate na-
‘tional. fe will not prove too great a task. This does
not mean that ‘there are forces at work which will
lead to the political absorption of Canada by the
United States; the mood of pessimism has passed be-
fore, and it will'pass again. It does mean that the
preservation of Canadian political. identity costs
every inhabitant of Canada:a tangible and consider-
able sum. . The struggle t> billd a Canadian nation
is not only, from the economie point of view, a strug-
gle with nature in a land of vast spaces and harsh
climate; it is a struggle to keep up with the wealthiest
nation In the world, and at the same time to keep dis-
‘tinct from it. This factor should be taken into
‘count ‘In commenting on the meagre
made by Canada to, Imperial defence. That
Canada should have maintained the essentials of an
independent nationality In face of the immense power
of attraction of the United States is a great achieve-
ment. .The appeal of economic profit has never been
the fing! argument with Canadians either of British or
of French descent.
Tt can be assumed that when the foregoing writer
refers to the “meagre contributions made by Canada to
{Imperial cafence™ he is using the phrase employed by
“those whose conception of Empire protection is almost
exclusively based on Battleship contribution. It does
not occur -to these critics that the railway systems
of this Deminion, the cost of construction and main-
tenance of which would: stagger most people, while
ac-
contributions
» lessential to our national existence, are more important
contributions towards Imperial defence than’ is ‘popu-
larly supposed. ‘ Fhen it is sometimes forgotten that,
as well. as ‘maintaining the essentials of an inde-
‘pendent nationality,"" Canada sacrificed nearly 65,000
+oF her sons in the Empire's cause between 1914 and
‘1918. Not meagre, this.
NO MUSSOLINI FOR BRITAIN
‘TF PREMIER BALDWIN WAS NOT ABLE
; to promise the peopleof Great Britain very
much-in his pronouncement at Brighton on Thursday,
séonfining- himself in_ the main- to a~recital- of some -
cof the principal difficulties with which“his-Govern-
yment is confronted, he lét it be known that the path
\of a Mussolini in the Old Country would be a pretty
istony one. ‘The cabled reference to, this subject is
‘brief; but the Prime Minister was clear‘on the point
when he said “I have been told that the country wants
a Mussolirii, but the English will never tolerate a dic-
ator” - .
While there is little danger of an upstart atiempt-
~$ng’to lead the people’ of Great“ Britain bythe trove;
$6 per annum
sey
suggestions “are being made in the
from the platform:that the growth of the Fascisti
movement in'England and Wales is the harbinger of
trouble and, if not curtailed, may present the Govern-
ment with-a bigger and more difficult problem than
any confronting. it at the present time. Certain it is
that if an organization. of this kind is allowed to, feel
its weight, as it were, a time will come when, like
great armies and navies, it will want to try its hand
“at Something. -T har something “is* very “likely to” Be
inimicat-to the best interests of the state.
COMPARISONS
ERE ARE SOME INTERESTING COM-
parisons. In 1890 the population of the
United States was about 63,000,000. — Its. foreign
trade was a little less than $1.647,000,000 a year, «
made up of $789,000,000 of imports and $858,-
000,000 of exports.
Canada’s population is*around 9,000,000, one-
seventh of the population of the United States
thirty-five years ago. Our foreign trade is about
$1,980,000,000, more than $230,000,000 larger
than-that-of the United Statex when our neighbor's
population was 63,000,000. Our exports are
$1, 143,357,000, which is $285,000,000 more than
the exports of the United States when it had-seven
times our present population. Our imp®rts are $837.-
861,000, so -we had a favorable balance of trade
something like $300,000,000._ We ate now, the fifth
trading hation of the world.” - oa
“Mr. Meighen seems to regard this condition of
affairs as a calamity. He prefers the good’old times
when the balance was against us and when our dollar
was worth about 85 cents across the. international
boundary line. - It- is now-werth pat -and at.times
runs a little better than that in-the United States.
THAT IS MR., KING'S POLICY
HE MORNING PAPER NOW-FELLS
us that Mr. Meighen stands for Canada
standing on her own feet, for maintaining her Prestige
anct “power of self-determination.and-of considering
the welfare of her own people all the time.
But it is mone other thai Mr. Meighen who has
been telling everybody that Canada ig tottering to her
economic fall. | It is thé. Conservative Party which
trots out the flag and waves it almost every time ‘this
country; wnder the’ vigorous leadership~ of Mr-- Mace
kenzie King, has the courage to talk plainly over the
Imperial Conference table. And it-is the definite
policy of the Liberal Government to look after the
welfare of ALL THE PEOPLE of the country.
Mr. Meighen is* concerned, as his policies prove,
only about the welfare of the few.
And the morning paper_is surely whistling to
keep up its political courage when it says that the
people of the Pacific Coast are with Mr. Meighen
in the policies he has set forth. They know: one
thing, among many others, that he is opposed to the
measure of relief which the Railway, Board has ex-
tended to the West. That he calls “utterly inde-
fensible.””
ASSURING PEACE BY TA XATION
IR JOHN POWER, CONSERVATIVE
member for Wimbledon in the British House
of Commons, hit the nail on the head in Vancouver
yesterday when he said that “‘the greatest ambas
sador of peace is the tax collector.”
It may seem harsh to say that every country
should pay. its war bills in full as far as such bills can
be paid in money and kind. — It is none the less true
that such a contention can be justified on humanitar-
ian and économic grounds. It would drive home
the lesson of the last great conflict more effectively
than anything else. It would make peace a more
popular topic than it is at the present time in! more
countries than one. Such’a policy would strip the re-
maining vestiges:of academic status from the League
of Nations and- give that_organization the fullest au-
thority to prevent resort to: arms in the. future
Great Britain is assuredly footing her bill. France
is arranging payments to Britain and the United
States. Germany is experiencing some of the slisad-
vantages of her policy-of-repudiation, “Something of
the reckoning is taking place;-but it remains to be
seen whether ‘it is enough to leave a really effective
impress upon the minds of the present and future
generations.
Mr. Meighen has been on the defensive through-
out his entire western tour. This is a new role for a
leader of ‘an opposition. As Dr. King pointed out
last night, he has been explainifg and complaining. In
the light of his anti-Western attitude, that was nat-
ural enough.
Henri Bourassa, ultra-Nationalist, who did his
utmost to hinder recruiting in Quebec during the war,
is being supported by the Conservatives as a candi-
date for Labelle. Truly the whirligig of time brings
its revenges. No wonder Mr. Meighen and his sup-
porters are not waving the flag in this election, It
might not fit in with the campaign of Mr. Bourassa,
Mr. -Patenaude and Mr. Armand Lavergne, who just
now are violently attacking the British preference and
preaching a rampant nationalism. It is significant
that Conservative election predictions acclaim these
candidates as Conservative, although they themselves
declare themselves to be as ‘‘free from Meighen as
they are from King.”
‘WORDS OF WISE MEN
Blessings may appear under the shape of paina,
losses and disappointments, but let hirn have pa-
tience and he will see them tn their proper figure.
, —Addison,
> ed
God be thank'd that the dead have left etill
Good tindatm for the living, to do
Still some_aim|for the heart and the will
And the soul of a man to pursue,
-—Owen Meredith.
ie
‘The “world-in all doth but two nations bear.
The good, the bad, and these mixed everywhere,
7 ~—~Marvell,
Youth ia to all the glad season of life; but often
only by what hopes, not by what it attains or what
it escapes. —wCarlyle,
~ ye soe
—MteMpt ihe end and Never Btand to” doubt! tf
Nothing's so hard but search will find it out
= my 3 “Herrick
~ ae eee : . &
Words are-the<transcript of those ideas Which
are In the mind of fan, and that writing or-print-
“{hg IW the transeripe or Wwerda Addison. |
¥ *
public press and
25S a re ES Ces aoe
7
g
How Danoing Views
Meighen’s Policy:
(Hon. Charles Dunning, at Premier
King’s Regina Meeting)
The outstanding issue in this cam-
paign is the proposal of the Conser-
.} Yative..Party,.if returned to. power, to
bring about-an- all-round increase in
the customs tariff.
1 sometimes wonder if the people
of this part of Canada have yet fully
grasped what this proposal menna to
them, Whatever the tariff may mean
to some sections’ éf Canada, not even
Mr.’ Melghen will question that to
the people of Western Canada it Is
& tax pure and simple and is tn fact
the highest Individual tax now borne
by the people. Whether or not the
tariff: brings advantages to ~“wome
othep parts of Canada is debatable,
but i2 is beyond debate that no pos-
siby advantage can accrue from it
to the people of the West/
The leader of the Tory party ad-
mits this when he offers a species of
horse trade by way of alleged bit
very indefinite compensation. in. 1
way rates to the West and tHe Marl—
times for the extra taxation-involved
in his tariff proposals. That form. of
compensation. is so futile and im-
practicn! as: tobe unworthy of-sert.«
ous discussion and no. one anywhere
4- Canady ts discussing it as a seri-
ous proposition.
+_ + +
For the past several years: thet
people of. this part of Canada have
been-_struggling against adverse
economfe conditiona,
But we in the West.can begin te
seq daylight and just at -the time
when the Yirst rgys.appear, along
come Mr. Meighen and his party with
a definite proposal to rob us of the
fruits of our years of struggie by
an all,round’ increase in that part of
our: taxation which at present hears
most heavily.upon us.
Western people, genetally, recog-
nize that Canada in spite of its great
area is one country and, therefore
must have one fiseal system All
parts of Canada must make conces
sions in order that all may share fn
the benefits of a united” country
Many. partsof Canada,: especially the
West —and Maritime provinces, are
making to-day: under the present
tariff very great sacrifices In the way
of & form of taxation which brings |
them no benefita and the great issue
before our people on October 29 Is
whether this burden shall be still
further increased by a policy which
cannot possiily mean a higher price
for any commodity we have to sell
but word definitely meen—n—higher
price for everything: we have to buy
from shoes and clothes for the fam
fly to the machinery used tn devel -
oping the great natural resources of
the country f
What does it mean to the city
dweller? It means for every family
tn -thie—city ot Regina” a-—definitety
higher cost of living, higher prices
for everything which f# purchased
for the family and, I venture to say
that it does not mean aff Increase in
salary or wages for any Man or wo
man within the sound of my voice,
+ +
In some parts of Canada Conser-
vative speakers are stating as the
policy. of. their party the/|‘raising of
the Canadian tariff to the same level
as that of the United States, I have
made some study of the -posaible
effect of this and wish to solemniy
state herd my opfnion that a Cana-
dian tariff on the same basis as that
of the United States would ruin
Western Canada by forcing the cost
of production so high as to make
farming operations generally unpro
fitable. I cannot bring myself to be
that the people of any part of
Canada deatre to adopt Melghen's
disuniting policy
With an tesue so clear and funda
mental as this, the wonder fs that
those opposed to Increasing the tariff
tax burde do not organize together
with the common objective of pre-
venting the return of a Tory govern-
ment No one rekréta more than IT
do the division of the low tariff
forces in, Western Canada
Divide and rule is an old Tory
axiom and the principle being fol-
lowed to he ‘Ifmlt th Citiadae to-day
On-such an issue in a-straight fight
everyone knews that Saskatchewan
would not return a single Meighen
supporter With the prospect of
three-cornered contests there is Tory
activity even In this province
lleve
While dissension among like
minded people is unfortunate, 1 am
convinced that the sanie common-=
sense of the western people will see
fo it that, whatever happens,
Meighen candidates shall pot be
allowed to slip in because of It.
To my mind this ig the most criti-
cal election since the-opening up of
this part of Canada.
else
()ther People’s Views
Letters addressed to the Editor and tn-
tended for publication must be short and
logibly written, The longer ah article the
shorter the chance of Insertion
Muntcations must beer the name and ad-
Groene of the writer, but not for pubjication
unless the owner wishes. The publication
or rejection of articles ia « matter enti-ely
in the discretion of the Editor. No respon=
sivility le assumed by the paper for MSS.
submitted to the Editor.
WATER“
To the Editor:—I think the -atti-
\tude of the City Council in the water
controversy with Saanich t¢ to be
commended ———
As a taxpayer T certainly object to}ern wing of the Conservative Party
the residents of that municipality re
celving their water at any price
which does not show a fair profit to
the city, Just why the representatives
of these residents should expect our
eouncil to sell them water ata rate
which enables them to retail it to
consumers in Saanich at a lower price
thar “we In Victoria can obtain ft ts,
I must) frankly confess,,’beyond ma
On wh ground can -Saanich expect
it anléss they Are steeped in the
rankest kind of Soclalisn. Victoria
has spent milliona and developed the
system and now the energy and
business foresight le te go for nothing
and the owners are to pay more for
the water than those who have done
nothing. to create the supply
Saanich must come to earth and
| abandon ali hopes of benefiting at the
expense of citizens of Vietoria.
vances to all thé netghboring munict-
palities and has been repelled and the
time hag noW come to Insist that cur
Se ete. Nas mde friendly ale to
All com-
--VICTORTA DATLY TIMES; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10,1925 ©
|
|
|
== 7
r
f.
2 oe : —s pane:
— RL
estern electors to forget all about
freight rates because they are a maiter
for—éxperts: His suggestion to
western electors to forget all about
freight rates-when+the-dominant-wing
of -his party has pledged itself to}
‘support the East-against the West is! :
rather funny. It meazis that the}
westertt electors are to elect a party
which will refuse to give them what)
they want, and then talk about freight |
rates if they want to when thé issue
is settled. Mr. Meighen, in his per-|
ambulations about the couptry,. has
stumbled” upon ‘a hornets’ nest, and}
now he is asking the hornets to retire},
to their homes again in peace.
‘A COAL FOR EVERY:
- PURPOSE
———— That's,
° a
5
ellington
It suits the requirements of
the average home in Furnace,
The ‘practical certainty of Robert}
Forke’s re-election in Brandon with!
Liberal support is good news for|
everyone, Mr. Forke does not. pro-
vide the Progressive! Party — with
spectacular leadership. | He is not
brilliant, he is not alarming, he is not}
even noisy, but there is a copious store |
of-common-sense-behind his. rough+
Scotch burr. No finer type of man, |
no more honest heart ever went to!
of large buildings.
“DOES LAST LONGER’
Kirk Coal Co.
rK L0ai U0.
laird of Pi By plain, mugged.
= EEMPFFED:-*—~ Fh tien like him the greatness of the great!
West was. built. . In a seething!
world of clever people, who are grow-
ing cleverer every day, it is refresh-
ing-to find someone like Mr. Forke-
who is thoroughly prosaic . and not
ashamed of it. : 24
1212 Broad St. Phone 139
— ~
EW
The Triumph of Expert Tea Blending
Seld by Grocers throughout Canada
Conservative Senators from British
Columbia are ‘taking an active part
in the campaign sto elect Consarvative
candidates. This *is not surprising, |
as Conservative candidates belong to
@-party~-which: —is —pleged-—against ;
Senate reform. Conservative Sena-
tors from British Columbia have no
intention of being reformed if they}
can possibly-prevent it.
Senators Green and’ Barnard, |
staunch and sturdy pillars of that
older and sterner school of states-
manship which holds that elections
are not won by prayers, told the Con-
servative nominating convention the |
other night to take no chances in
electing even a candidate—like“Dr.}
Tolmie. Pray, if you want to, but
citigens are-fuily patd for ail conven -
icneces and services rendered
Our city counecl! must. not be gen-
erous at the expense of the taxpay~
ers who built the waterworks
aint HEB.
Politics.
How Rates Cot Into Politics.
Whe—Put-Them—T here—and-
Why. a
: : ; cam find and all others besides, so
Mr. Meighen Denies His Own long os they are Wdt Literal, wan the|
Child.
| Efreshing advice offered
Old: Bob Fork, Friend-sf veers easton
Everybody. at
Senators: Who Want to Stay
Unreformed.
the
“Tt was not so much what the |
veteran senators said, however, as the |
way they said it. They said it with
a certain yearning that must have come |
Mr. Meighen is shocked and from their hearts. And when Mr. |
grieved that the freight rate ques-| Barnard —asked the convention to
tion should have been made an issu) remember that he had been elected to|
inthe present election. The Gov-| Parliament in 1908 simply because |
ernment, he says, is responsible and
he had worked harder than his}
ought to be ashamed of itself. As! enemies and because the Liberals had!
Mr. Meighen himself created an elec- foolishly. neglected.to...bring...dowm4
tion issue out of freight rates, aP-| forty- voters who were spending. the’!
parently he has surveyed his handi- day at Nanaimo—at this recital even|
ig bom is not proud of a ‘ the thorny bosom of a Conservative |
q ere is ‘no mystery about the! -onvention must have been pierced.
freight rates question getting into the} A) uncharitable mind might even|
election campaign. The Mackenzie have imagined that the veteran}
King Government brought down senators were interested in something |
legislation in Parliament paving the) becides the salvation of the country. |
way for the Railway Board to equal- Such an abominable mind might peel
ize -freight- rates all _over__Canada.
i have imagined that the _-veteran
This was designed to scrap the pre- senators did not want the Mackenzie
sent rate system by which it costs King Government tobe. re-elected
about twice as much to haul a hun-/,, reform unreformed Elder Statesmen
dred-pound ‘sack. of anything 2 hun- like them: But, thank Heaven,
dred miles in British Columbia as it
al te ea minds that could think such things!
costs to haul the same sack a hun-} sre never “admitted into the bosom of}
dred miles in eastern Canada. The
. . a Conservative convention.
Government's—policy—ofequalization
was so obvious that it anticipated
little ‘serious objection, except of a
minor sectional character. Certainly |
it did not imagine for a moment that
the official Conservative Party, whcih
claims to represent all Canada, would
attack’ such a measure. It did not
regard freight rates as an issue in any} ,,,),‘ctoul™ Ost. sithe ever Sterthaen
sense. It did not forsee that in the| B.C. and fair weather Is generat on ihe
Coast
election there would be ‘any conflict] ana Sound, and rain has fallen at Kam-
of opinion between it and its op- loops and in Sagem Alberta
ponents on a policy which merely es=} victoria qPais vieelag 4 on:
tablished the broad principle of equal
rates for equal service everywhere.
Victoria, Oct. 16.—5 am.—The baro-
tempera-
ture, maximum yesterday, 54
47; wind, 2 miles E.; rain,
tougy
Vancouver—Barometer, 29.98
ature, «maximum . yesterday,
mum, 46; wind, calm; weather,
Kamloops—Barometer, .29.04
ature, maximum yesterday, . 52
mum, 44; wind, calm: rain,
fair,
Rarkerville-——Barometer, 20.04 tem-}
perature, maximum yesterday, .¢8; min!- |
mum, wind, calm; snow, 3
weather, olear
Prince Rupert-—Barometer, 30.28
perature, maximum yesterday, 5%
mum, 38; wind, calm; weather, foray
Batevan. Point-—Baramnter, 29.98
perature, maximum yesterday, 68; mini,
mum, 45; wind, 16 miles N.W.; weather,
01; weather,.|
In due course the Railway Board
started to put the new legislation into
effect ‘in. a measure by equalizing
western grain rates.: Then, without
warning, Mr. Meighen suddenly
stood up on a platform in Halifax
and violently attacked this beginning
Or. Fate justice as_an- indefensible sop
to the West. On top: of that the
Montreal Star, his organ, shrieked
forth the announcement that the east-
temper-
mint
teom- |
; wind, 4 miles K.; wea
Portiand, Ore.—Baromete:
perature, maximum yesterday
mum, 50; wind, 4 miles 8.;
cloudy. -
Seattle Barometer,
would never vote for rate equaliza-
tion and against the interests-of Mon-
treal." And almost simultaneously
Mr. Meighen’s party friends, the gov- —
ernments of Nova Scotia and New
Brunswick, went before the Railway
Board and demanded the repeal o
the grain rate equalization order.
weather,
29.96; tempera-
These events; engineered by the
Conservative Party, forced freight
rates into the election. That ‘was
precistly where Mr. Meighen wanted
them so long as he was talking to
4
a crs terra isi
—— ae
Ottawa than old-Bob-Forke, the’ ¥
turn out every Conservative vote "you |”
Fog ts reported on the Straits | ©
mintmurm, | tere
06; weather, |G
mini- | Ottawa
} Montreal
Lam~| Be
| Halifax
Meee peak: Serums |Vic Fole Gains a
Match With Lynch’
Vancouver Oct 10.—-Vie_ Foley,
ture, maximum yesterday, 58; minimum, | Canadian bantamweight champion,
<7} =
: = \
. . :
*,
—
- So Different
HE used to work in‘an office before she °
was married, but things are done dif-
ferently now. . Of course, she got out of the
way of office work and that is why it seems
harder than it used to, though she is given
only the least important jobs. The younger
girls are so quick. They take things so easily,
and the managers seem to prefer to déal with
younger, brighter, quicker assistants — girls
who have no responsibilities generally, and
no-thought about anything but beaux and
clothes.
It is hard ‘to gét back to office work after
several years of devoted service as wife and.’
mother. And her salary‘is pitiful. If she had
only known—!
it’s the old story—the widow with inadequate
insurance and a family to keep. Why do these
things happen?
They happen because men live in the present.
They think too much about-now, and. not enough
about the future. They run risks they ought nor”
to run. They do not carry adequate insurance.
Take your’ own case. What insurance - . do yeu
carry? Is it enough to ect your wife from the
necessity of supporting erself and her children if
you were nor here to doit? “You must face the
question. . Let our agent counsel you as to the
amount of Mutual insurance you can afford to
carry and the types of policy you need for the
various purposes you have to consider—monthly
income, education, endowment, will administra-
tion, etc., etc. :
‘The Mutual Book tella' about Mi ity, or
insurance at net cost, and the different Mutual
policies. Write for it today.
™MUTUAL LIFE
oF CANADA 328222
Ontario
| The-Office-Seems |
BRANCH OFFICE
201-204 Times Bldg.
Victoria, B.C.
a OOOO
*
has been matched, to meet California
» Lynch in a ten-round bout here
The men will fight
Octobes 16
at°122 pounds
Jack Allen
within the
Wilson
Eber.
| here
Mickey
Bobby
: 4
Sopa hcl 58
A. &. Graham
_OAK BAY
If You Are a Buyer
EET DET
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN THIS’
FAVORED DISTRICT ARE SELLING —
If You Area Seller
_Consult_Us, We Are Specialists in Oak Bay Properties
_ Alfred Carmichael @ Co. Ltd.
OFFICE—FORT. STREET, AT BROAD-
Foley's manager,
wired an offer-of- $1,400 for «-mateh
next two months to
Tor{nto, manager of
VICTORIA FUEL Co. Ltd.
1203 Broad Street — Phone 1377
&. M. Brown:
* oS
VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925 "5 0
DAVID SPENCER LIMITED |
———=-Stere-Meurs:-2 a.m. te §9,.m, Wednesday, 1 p.m. Saturday, § p.m
_ ean Disposal of
1,500 Yards of Linoleum
SJ Discontmued Lines mall!
“At Special Anniversary Prices Monday
1,000 Yards of Inlaid Linoleum,
Anniwersary Price... 2. 00. .e $ 1 .05
Greenwich Inlaid Linoleum,.shown in twelve designs,
suitable for dining-room, hall or kitchen.
niv ersary price, a square yard .
all perfect goods. Designs
The color goes cre to the back. . A"-
“500 Yards of Beasts Printed Linoleum, a Sa. Yard
) 85c
a, leer M onlays
Startling reductions in Crockery and-China lines — means real bargains in
this department. “Blie-de-Roi*~
and ‘‘Limoges”’ patterns. These will be: arranged in small and large sets at,
oe |
Two well-known patterns “will be cleared,
remarkably low prices.
32-piece Dinner Sets, in either of the above patterns, each
consisting of 6 dinner plates;—6-tea—plates,-6—eups_and
saucers, 6 soup-plates, 1 open vegetable dish,, 1 platter.
Regular price $12.15. To clear
21-piece. Tea Sets, in ‘‘Blue- de Roi’ ;
terns.
and * ‘Limoges”’ pat-
, 88-piece Breakfast Sets of ‘‘Blue de Roi’’ or ‘* Limoges
pattern,” consisting of 6 breakfast-plates, 6 fruit plates,
6 cereal dishes, § cups and saucers, 6 egg cups, 1 platter
l baker. Regular, a set $12.15.
$7.95
Clearing at ....
2-Only, _Blie-Wilow-Pattern-Dinner Setseach-consistine—of
—2-Onty, Genuine French himoges Ching Dinner Sets
On sale, a set
114-piece Porcelain Dinner Set, Clearing Price $99.00
One only, Copeland ‘‘Spode’’ 114-piecé Dinner Set, Avon-
dale pattern. The set consists of 12 dinner plates, 12 lunch
plates, 10 dessert plates, 12 bread and butter plates, 12
soup plates, 12 tea cups and saucers, 6 afternoon cups and
saucers, 5 platters, 3 covered vegetable dishes, 1 sauce boat
and stand, 1 gravy boat and stand, 1 baker. 99
Clearing pga inea Obua Poemean ities $ 0
.
Clearance of Odd China
Kitchen Cups and Saucers, the old favorite clover leaf pat-
tern. Clearing at 6 for ..55eé
Cups, and Saucers: in Special,
12 for . D0e
Plain—White—Breakfast—Plates. ~owhile they fast,
.. 59¢
China Dessert or Fruit Sets, bow! and six fruits. These ate
beautifully decorated. Clearing, a set ...... $1.49
Blue Band English China Cups and Saucers: Regular price,
a dozen, $7.00. Clearing at, each sr 25¢
Small Size Blue Band Cups and Saucers 6n sale, each 20¢
Large Size Breakfast Cups, eups only,- Regular price,
dozen, $8.00, on sale, each
Blue Band English — China
@for Ti
English Fancy China Cups and Saucers, beautifully decor
ated, on sale, each ........0.ccccseceese ita ae A9¢
Odd Sugars and C reams, in fancy china’: regular_a: ‘pair to
$7.50. On sale, a pair $2.00
China Salad Bowls, large ‘size, Clearing
price, each
all-over blue design.
On-sate
Dessert—Plates;—on— sate
pattern.
Bowls and Bakers
English Fireproof Baker; brown and white lined, oval and
round shapes. On sale, each
White Lined Brown Earthenware Bread Mixing Bowls,
large size. On sale, each $1.69
Large Size Stone Bean Crocks; regular price 90c. On sale
for 59¢
Stone Hot Water Bottles; On sale
neat
regular, each, $2.00.
7 Austrian China Dinner Sets
52 Pieces, a Set, $13.75
52-piece Austrian China Dinner Sets, consisting of 6 dinner
plates, 6 lunch plates, 6 soup plates, 6 tea plates, 6 fruit
dishes, 1 salad, 6 cups and saucers, 1’ covered vegetable
fish, i sugar.and-cream, -Lslop.bowl,..1.-platter,.1grary...
boat and.#tand.An entirely different .tyle of decoration
ont “very pleasing. ‘Great value, a set $13.75
—China, Lower Main Floor
Glassware at Clearance Prices
Golored Glass Hyacinth Bulb Vases, excellent for Christmas
flowering bulbs. On sale, each 19¢
Glass Flower Baskets, for table decorations. peer price,
each, $1.50, for
Silver-mounted Glass Salad Bowls, on-sale, mi
Odd lot of Liquor Bottles, on‘saie, each
—Crockery, Lower Main Floor
52-piece Dinner Sets in ‘*Blue=de-Roi’’
Dominion Printed Linoleum, in four designs, all perfect, and great value at 85¢
or Limoges’’ pat-
terns, made up of 6 cups and saucers, 6 dinner plates, 6
desert plates, 6 bréad and butter plates, 6-fruits, 6 soup
plates, 1 covered vegetd#ile dish, 1 salad bowl, 1 sugar, 1
tream, I-stop-bowt;-} gravy-boat,-1- pickle-dish; : platter.
Regular, a set $22.50.
Clearing for
Small Dinner Sets_of 25 pieces.
a_ set $7.25. Clearing, cach
Regular,
Pull 97-piece Dinger Sets, in'Blue de Roj.”’ or **Limoges
pattern, sufficient for 12 persons, three sets only. Reg.,
ee $25.95
WILTON RUGS
All Sizes—Special Anniversary Prices
Wilton Rugs of durable quality and in-afine-selection of de-
signs at the fyllowing remarkably. low prices.
6 only, 9 ft. x 12 ft. Wilton Rugs, in rose, blue, tan or fawn
grounds. Special-Anniversary Price, each .. .. 869.75
2 only, oft 10 tt in, Witton” Regs-2-erey-anih tan
ground. Speeial Anniversary Price, each $62.00
5 only, 9 ft. x 9 ft. Wilton Rugs, including drab, blue and
fawn grounds. Special Anniversary Price, each... $55. 00
9 ft. Wilton Rugs, including tans, blie
6 only, 6 ft. 9 im. x
jal Anniversary Price, each, $39.75
and rose grounds. Spec
—LAinoleum, Second Floor
Anniversary Selling of
French and English Block
Print
Cretonnes
Block Print English Cretonnes, 30 inches wide. Splendid
52 pieces each,
plates; 6 bread-and butter plates, 6 fruit dishes, 6 soup p!
salad, 1 gravy boat and stand, 1 sugar, 1 cream, 1 slop bo wl; 1
ates, t
$1.49 -
OL pease Ot sate,
Lamp Shade Classes
Every Day During Store: Hours
Consisting of 6 dinner m tates. 6 ne age
) cups and saucers, 2 Covered ve
large and 1 small platter.
gétable dishes deas, new
$27.50
52-piece Dinner Set, Clearing Price $6.95
52-piece Dinner Set of John&én Bros.’
’
col
ng taught
semi-porcelain, plain
white and consisting of- 6 cups and saucers, 6 soup plates,
6 tea plates, 6 dinner plates, 6 Tinch plates, 6 fruit dishes,
1 gravy boat, 1 pickle dish,
platter, 1 sugar and eream.
Ctearing for
1 slop bowl, i.salad bowl,
Chocolate Sets Clearing at $3.39
- . ' 4 .
Fine China Chocolate Sets, comprising jug and six cups
Great value, set $3.39
Teapot, Sugar and Cream Set, very fine china, neat floral
and saueers, béautiful, clean wave.
design. Clearing for, a set
Brown Betty Teapots, all sizes.
On sale, each
Cut Velvet Frocks
3 . . have pleated godets that
Hand-painted China at Clearance Prices grey and brown and rust.
Hand-painted China Teapot Stands.
China Pepper and Salts.
On sale, each .
On sale, a pair
Hand-painted China Mustard Pots, complete with spoon
On sale, each
Men’s Socks
Best Qualities at Special
Hand-painted China Bon-bon Dishes; dainty designs and
shapes. On sale, ¢ach
One Only, Richly Decorated China Tea Set, very hand- Asehveneny Velont
some and consisting of teapot, sugar and cream, 6 dessert
plates and-5 only cups and saucers.
Regular price $25.00. On sale for
Men’s All Wool Socks,
heavy Fall weight,
fancy rib, in Seotch
tweed, Lovat and hea-
ther mixture - shades;
extra special heel and
toes. 52nd Anniversary
values at, a pair $1.00
Bon Ton
Cor-sette
For the Fuller Figure
$7.50
An.extra Jong. Corselette, with
wide insets of elastic over the
hips and well boned down the
back and across the abdomen,
very long over ‘hips; elastic in
shoulder. straps and four hose
supporters. This~corselette fs
ideal for the fuller figure, gives
Wood's Brand Socks;
made in Canada, silk
and wool mixture=in
fancy dropstiteh rib,
with reinforced” heel
and toe. Shown in as-
sorted. heather shades.
A nice looking Fall sock
at, a pair... ...$1,00
Wood's Brand Silk ant
Wool Socks in ‘fancy
and plain rib, two-tone
shades; shown in> a
large range of colors.A
light weight ‘dressy
sock for Fall wear,
Very special, pair 75¢
~—Men's Furnishings,
Main Floor
a smoothness of line not so easily attained with a separate
corset and brassiere. Made of heavy weight fancy cotton
and. priced at -.. 87.50
—Corsets, First Floor
or Sthemes—and_new methods of lamp
daily by our instruetréss during store
in smart eolor
give the
range of designs and color schemes to suit most every room.
Anniversary Price, a yard
Bloek-Print Cretonnes, 36 inches wide. Anexeceedingly smart
range of French eretonnes. Anniversary Price, yard $1.50
Half Linen Cretonnes, 30, inches wide. A fine line-of block
print cretonnes, beautiful designs on a fabric 54 per cent.
linen, Anniversary Price, a yard $1.65
50-inch Linen, a fine selection of black print designs, smart
and serviceabte—Anniversary—Prices, a yard
Carpets, Second Floor
-—Drapery, Second Floor —Draperies, Second Floor
Large Selection of
Party Frocks
$17.90, $25.00, $29.75 and $35.00
Georgette and Chiffon Danee Froeks with contrasting colored slips, bouffant
petal trimmings at the waist line, sleeveless and with round nee ks.
16 to 36. Anniversary Price
skirts and
Shown in misses’ sizes,
$17.90
hayely-New Party Frocks of georgette and flat crepe with dainty trimmings of lace, rib-
bons»heads and embroidery. A.number of these frocks have contrasting colored silk slips,
finished “sleeveless but furnished with short sleeves that may be used if desired. Among
the many shades to be found are shell pink, rose, American Beauty, flame, powder, French
and light blue, grey, white and black. Sizes 16 to 44. Anniversary Price $25.00
A number
The shades~are gold and blue, black and white, blue and grey, henna and
Anniversary Prices, $29.75 and ....0¢0eeeenerereres a ennai
Chappie Coats and Turtle Neck
PULLOVERS
For Women and Misses—Anniversary Prices
$4.95, $6.75 and $7.50
Turtle Neck Pollovers:of light weight yarns, made with set-in
pockets in front. and shown in white with contrasting patterned
band at neck, cuffs and bettom. Sizes 34 to 40, each .. $4.95
Brushed Wool Chappié Coats with long sleeves and turn back
cuffs, small turn dowrt collar, fastening with one button at
collar and three buttons at bottom, finished with. contrasting
stripes at ciffs and bottem. Shown in black, brown with fawn
and grey with blue; sizes 38 and 40. Each ..........,- 86.75.
Light W eight Brushed Wool Chappie Codts in many popular shades with stripes in con-
trast on collar, Shown with long, tight sleeves and neat Bobbie collar, fastening with one
button at collar and-one button at-bottom, Shades are powder blue, sheepskin, rust and
fawn. Sizes 36 to 42. Each... $6.75
Better Grade Pullovers in shot effects of silk and wool, made with turtle neck, long sleeves
and.two set-in pockets. Shades are pompudour and navy blue shot with orange
36 to 40. Each ........
combinations, with gleaming rhinestone ornaments, fur and feather trimmings.
approved swing.
Sizes 16 to 40.
oer eee eee ee ae Tee mem ewww eeneneseaew sane
teen e ee eeeaee OTP PCUR ETRE ES SO Cee eee
Nayy Blue Flannel Middies with sailor collars wi trimmed with . ial
lation style with long sleeves; sizes for 6 to 14 years, Very special, each ......11.$2
Red Flannel Middies with black braid trimmings, ‘dilk Jace in front ae asd 285 y .
pocket. Shown in sizes for T to ‘14 years. Each veceseccmenens
“VICTORIA
DAILY
: Rinso, reg. 3 pkts. for
Now & for ....-cceses
Junket Powders
all flavors, per pkt. ......... 10¢
Knox Gelatine ,
18¢
Fancy Gravenstein Apples
WOT DUE sccciucsvecvies.s LIS
; Good Local Potatoes
Libby's Picnic Asparagus
reg. 25c tin for ............ 18¢
Robin Hood Flour
25c| 49-1b. sack .....0.-
_H. 0. KIRKHAM & CO. LTD.
1 Grocery Phones 12 Fort St.
Ceylon
reg. 65c Ib..for ...
Malkin's Best Jelly Powders
4 kts. ,... h
Butcher and Provisions
8621-5520
Fish Dept. 5521
A Sure Reiicf for Womens Disorders
_TEN DAY TREATMENT FREE |
--—-—~ Ora Lily is a certain relief for all disorders of women. It
“4a applied locally ‘and ta absorbed into the wuffering tance The
d waste matter in the congested region is
immediate mental and physical relief; the bi vessels a)
~ nerves are toned and ned, and the circulation is ren-
dered to normal. As this treatment is based on strictly scientific
principles and acts on the actual location of the disease, it cannot
help bat do im all forms of- female
troubles, dela: and painful
| menstruation, tong of thy conic,
qvarien: troubles, yore etc. 2 per box,
which ie sufficient 1 month's treatment. A Free
‘Trial Treatment enough for 10 days, worth 7c, will
be sent F to any—suffering woman. Inciose
3 stamps fe address MRS. L
DEPT. 27 OnT.
| ES STEN WOMEN PRESS FOR
Sea Sees oars - ; is
epee MELESIIES moe
FAIRFIELD CHURCH “=== |
solos with Mrs. Reid at the plano.
day’s Forum Meeting Basis of W.J. Resolutions
eral election campaign were laid I Spiritual Campaign to. Open
The of the Fed-| Numerous
before. the Liberal Women’s! To.morrow With Special
Forum ata well-attended meet Services
ing -vesterday afternoon, -when} em
: . Sunday w n be the opening day
ae ; ; day of 4 .
the speakers included Hon. J. H.} the great “Spiritual Campaign” as| day afternoon. These included
King. rdered by the General Council of the
Works
. recommendations embodying the
Victor Odium, | a Church of Canada. Special } " 7 >
MP. of WM. Ivet | Retvices will be held-in-the Puirfiela | Production a ot
Liberal rin. Mrs.| United Church by the Rev. R. w.| health by the contracting parties
Stuart of the} subject at the Sunday eve- i” t tire supT
Forum, was in thé will “Sitting *on the
Dr. King the brie
“The Curse of Indecision.”
dresses referred to the Dusing the week meetings wil!
British Oolu of the
‘ held as follows:
leaders, one explaining his position| Monday, 8 pam. — Meeting In
and trying to apologize for state-| charge of the Young People's Society
ments m the Maritime -preo- | and Rev. R. W. Lee.
vinces, th voicing principles | Tuestay, § p.m Rev. J
which made for.the benefit of ( | M.A
“Rte | Wedneedas, @ p.m --BRey
Freight | Best, B.A.
were dea t Thursday,
General the! wilson.
stand of these Friday, 8 p.m
matters ti- al
tudes of “ YI — iat ‘mauaio
stating “ay
Members of the islands
affecting community welfare,
main issiies
| along moral, educational and
of a series of resolutions passed
at the closing session of the Dis
}trict-Womens-Institutes_vester~
Federal Minister of Public
Brig.-General
Vancouver
candidate
Henderson,
clean bil
res
&
nce” or
chai be
I
I
nir
in ak ad Fe
presen in
two political
institu
and old
tion o
be
H. White,
an-
rates and tariff policies Bi Eertte
with at length by Brig
Odlum, who defined
the two parties on
He summed up thé
the respective parties
that the Liberal prin
as ita first inte
property, while
policy was to place
interests first and then hu
manity. Mr. Ivel also spoke briefly
pointing out that the questions is
volved in the election issues affected
women just -as-—much as they did
offenders
AGAINST GOVERNMENT
CONTROL
The resolut
mn
§ p.m.—Rev. Dr. W. G
Rev. R
will be rendered at
of the moetings: Ths éntire
Fairfield district is Invited to attend
these services
W. Lee m cor ning -prohibt
wis sp i by
Henderson, Dunean, who
that ernm
which
no eystem
¢ Nau
} traffic or eliminat
‘WOMEN’S COUNCIL To | “™= m1
DISCUSS DOMESTIC
SCIENCE IN SCHOOLS
Discussion will
he reguiar session of Local
of Women, to be held in the
Arts and Crafts Room,?Union Rank
Building, on Monday, October 12. at
2.90 p.m
The tople chosen ts “Home Econ-
omics as a Schoo] Study,” and all
wervative
vested
always ace anied
cordance with
strict organi
ever-increasing 1
quor traffte throughout
of. British 1
werm fifty-
sixty-three
1935,
exte
be the feature of
PANY YEARS OF
SATISFACTORY SER)
. ji!
# al s59
COLBERT PLUMBING
HEATING CO L'® 75s BrovcHion
notwit ’
vote, the Provincial r
the sale of
1,639, yet in add
m liquor
1925, 170 heer licenses to sell
beer
ste
to be present.
the Parent
who may
economics
urged to
Mrs. EF
turer in }
Normal
became nec to place
ject on the curriculum
ST. JOSEPH’S W.A.
‘ BUSY SEWING
The regular monthly meeting of | educational requir
the Women's Auxiliary of S&t.| Ing of selected Bible pasgages with-
Joseph's Hospital was held yesterday | out comment In the s hools, all chil
afternoon in the~ nurses’ recreation| dren to be excused whose parents
room, with Mrs. Frank Sehl in the| had conscieftious objections was
chair, Plans for the bazaar, which | unanimously endorsed:
is to ‘be held on Thursday, November The recommendation that thr
12, were idscussed and the next|perts in chitd welfare should
'Wewing meeting will be held at the| with the question of the treatment
home of Mrs. Pillar, Olive Street. of juvenile delinquents instead of
Work. done during the month was| leaving the matter entirely to the
|} as follows: Barracoats marked, 18; | presiding magistrate, was also sup-
sheets made and marked, 48; pneu-| ported a
monia jackets made, 7; sponges The recommendation of the Edu-
made, 1,863; pillow cases made, 4 cational Survey that greater atten-
baby pillow cases, 2; roller towels, tion be given to the physical training
face cloths made and marked, | 5: | of the child and that organized games
table cloths made, 16; baby towels, | should form @ part of the curriculum
1}; surgeons’ gowns marked, 4; op- | Of Vy school in _ into ew
erating’ room towels marked, 3; baby given the-hearty endorsement ¢
gowns made, 4; ~and towets | conference.
marked, 24
especially members ot} the Province."
acher Agssoclations. Any
be favorable to home
a school study are
> thetr—objections. the municipal and pr
Farr, BA.. former lec-| ¢ionsl those candidates who, sincerel)
onomits at Victoria | helieved in the enforcement of
in why it} iasw and the elim tion
this sub-|o¢ alcohol for -beve
¥ BIBLE-READING
Mra. Mason-Hurley
introduced the resolution asking
school consoldation tn the rural dis
tricts, on the ground that the
teacher echool did not meet m
ments. Ther
After pledging
measures for prohibit
ence pledged itself
not
as
votes
8
First Aid Kits and_
Surgical Dressings
for all occasions
MacFarlane Drug Co.
Cor.
of the
purr
essary ses."
of Shawnigan,
for
jern
Dougias and Johnson Ste,
HERE NOW
GOOD SCHOOL SHOES
MUTRIE & SON.
1208 Douglas Street Phone 2504
Resolutions of thanks were passed
to the management.of the Crystal
Garden, for tickets . kinflly sent; to
David Spencer. Limited, who had
kindly entertained the conference at
juneh on Thursday; to the Hadson's
Bay Company, fer the invitation 'to
tea; to the Provincial Government,
for-peoviding .a room. in. the Parlla~
ment Buildings for the meetings; and
to the press.
PRESENTATION MADE
A pleasing jittle ceremony which
Fiorence Nightingale Chapter—The
regular monthly meeting of the Flor-
erice Nightingale Chapter, 1.0.D.E.
fwas held at the residence of Mis,
| Mogaey, 234 Vancouver Street, a
large attendance of members being
present. The greater part of the af-
ternoon was taken up in formulating
plane in connection with the annual |;
bazaar, which will be held on No-
vember 14. Mrs. Percy Criddle was
proposed as a new. mémber. The | marked the close of the proceedings
weekly. sewing meeting will take| wna the presentation by Mrs. G. F.
place. at Mrs. Hi. A. Porter's home,| Watson, on behalf of the conference,
1206 Fautrftetd Road; on “Monday ar- | ot ® handsame leather purse to Mrs
ternotn, October 1%, at 2.30. All mem. | 8. W. Raven, the amticlent peorstary,
bers are asked to attend. ’ .Bach member also received a fragrant
i = butch of verbena, heather and statice
} reset from Mrs. Savory, the heather having
Juvenite- Fe ore—Court Liberty, come from Loch Lomond
A.O.F., juvenile Foresters, met in the r
= oo ou A i Mra_Henderson Lawrie, of the
| Foresters" Hall last night for their! moard of Directors, received con-
monthly meeting, a big surprise be- gratylations upon her silver wedding
ing given to the members and their| anniversary which she is celebrating
| friends when thirty new members| to-day. The secretary was Instructed
eS were -brought-te ‘end-initiated@=AT THE Tio write to Miss Ravenhill! congratu-
| close of the evening ice cream and | lating her upon her recovery from
j cake waa , and several dances | her Jong and serious Lliness.
and recitations were given the] At the close-of the sessions the
ae them being Miss L.
To! M B, Ruth ot ' Ray
i edge, nupiia of * rit the.
aed fs
SPECIAL MORNING OFFER
Between the hours of 9 to 11 we
will give, you Marcelling, Facial
or Scalp Treatment greatly
reduced. prices. - /
~Phone-us-forturther particular:
We have added to our, already
competent staff an operator of
wide expagience who is specializ-
i sof a ughly
»-to-date parlor.
HUB BARBER SHOP.
Phone 1357
reforms | **
| hygienic tines-formed-the—basis}—
the.questian ef irealment of tuvenile |
ho t > }
hose interested are cordially invited | glass have veen issued throughout
RURAL WOMEN HELD
|
N MacDonald
Mr. ¢
is @ visitor In tt
Mr. D. McMi of ¥ale,
arrived in the city this morning
fis at the Dominion Heitel..
> ;
} Mra. W. D: Todd returned to the
| city, yesterday afternoon
ot
ity on. business,
from Van-
Wood of Saturna Island
few days in Victoria
at the Balmoral Hotel
Mr. W. B
spending a
ind is a guest
Ne
visiting
of
iver
man Sawers
{ 3 and Mrs
t in Vance
fa are
r & few days
OConnell of Gar ily
Spenmting the week-end in
the guest of friends
+
Kent has
for a few
and Mrs
Mz
| font
Vane
P. L
ts
ouver as
Herbert
Vancouver
of Mr
visit
days as
Daryt Kent
been
est
family of Van-
g the week-end in
| © registered at the/
ral. Hotel.
Malkin came
from Vancouver this morning with}
j her father, Mr W. H. Hatlkin, for ‘a
short stay at the Empress Hotel,
»
iif Islands people Ti (ie tity te
lude Loretta MecBSorley and
Frees y Harbor and
Ashiey and Mr. V. C. Best of
Miss Margo
7
Mra.
After
England
Avenue
Marian
sper
Mr
and
some months in
Pitts of Rockland
his daughter, Miss
Pitts, sailédd for Canada: on
2, en route for Victoria
Mr have}
taken
Mra. Storer Brown
ip their residence thetr
new home 1342 -Oliver-Street, Oak }
| Ray,-after residing for some months
| past-at Weedlawn Crescent
and
at
Akehurst f Kamloops is in
1 Viet 2 on a Short visit ‘Traveling
with er Miss King of ‘London,
England. They are at the Empregs
Hotel
+ +
and Mrs. R. Nixon and little
of Wilmot Place have been}
w the past week In Alberni as
Mr
expected |
Mr.
daugh
spend
the guests of the
and Mrs. Pierce,
-home-to=morrow.
latter's parents
and are
TheTetand in t
lude Mr
| rt Alice
Royston and
| Campbell River
Dominion Hotel
Among yesterday's hostesses was
Mra. W. C..Todd who @ntertained at
her home, “Wilmar,” 5t Charles
Street, with bridge and mah jong
The guests included Mra. John Galt,
|. Mra. W. Oathout, Mrs. A. V. Macan,
Mrs. G. A. Kirk, Mrs. E. G, Prior,
Mrs. Cator and Mrs. Wesley Davison
+ +
Jellett,' assistant general |
manager of the Royal Trust Com-
} pany, and Mrs. Jellett have arrived
}at the coast from Montreal and. are
expected in the city to-morrow after-
noon._They are accompanied by Mra.
Jellett's sister, Miss Avice Meeker.
+ n
Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Moraes!
held a very enjoyable whist drive at}
their home on Tuesday evening. The/
prisewinners were lady's, first,
Mrs. Watson; .second, Mrs. Denonl;
consolation, Mra, Winters.
an's, first,.Mr. Watson; —second,
Mr. Bryant; consolation, Mr. Dawson.
Mrs. Watson has kindly offered her
home for a 500 drive, to take place In
the near future.
people own to-day
and Mrs. BE, B. Slack of
Mrs. R. P. Dowdall of
M PJ << Rogers of
They Aré All At the
Mr. RJ
+
The first of a series of public
dances will take place to-night In
the Chamber of Commerce ballroom
under the capable management of
Mrs. Simpson, Who Has recently re-
turnéd fron? the South. These af-
fairs proved very enjoyable last sea-
gon in the Alexandra Club. Ray
Kinloch's four-piece orchestra will
| ranged
} the tea table
} hard
Mrs
Gentiex+
supply the latest music, while re-
freshments will be available during
the evening. Dancing will take place
from 8,30 till ax 30-
Mr. and Mrs. Henderson Lawrie, of
Keating, who. are to-day celebrating
the twenty-fifth anniversary of thefr
wedding, were. the recipients of a
joity eurpriee party last evening fn
anticipation of the
‘Members of the South Saanich Wo-
men's Institute and personal friends
tothe numberof about forty Invaded
the house and, after extending their
eongratulations_-and-__good —_wighea,
anniversary. |
TIMES, SATURDAY. OBER 161995 aaa ene Alor Saeenenneeen-aentnen nemnevaern anmreth ne adnan
PROFITABLE CONFERENC
District Women’s Institutes who yesterday afternoon closed a most successful. three
were discussed. The majority of the members left for their homes last ove
asaed with music, danging
sive 600, and l
ts Were served
In honor of Miss Nonie C
poplar dride-eheet, Mra.
Bey entertained at
Abell
Campbell
Mrs. H
Edwerds,
Crowe
Mra._G. Brown,
Mra. H. P. Hodges.
the Misses Elsa Miche
1 Straith, Blanche Richards a
rothy Scott
- — 1
Taylor of
hostess at
iH
16 was the
tea atthe
Linden
a dellg
Empress Hot
afterr t
pngaged in play
dining rooms which were
with
Autumn ‘flowers t
and Mrs. J. E. B. Dixon presided at
t with its effective deeco-
rati of dahlias
ith mauve
ns and
and pink ca
Mrs. F. M
i Mrs. Eimer Fi
hostess in serv
A programme Of social
} coming Winter was
members of the St
their mee
hall, the objective being
ficient funds to
court
Club at
ésent }
next
improvements
to-the pr 1 are 1 anned far
mmittee
pws: Misses K
isbister and Mr r
The first event of the
e a dance, to held
Nall on Satur
rass cou
the near
Kensington
will t
the parish
season
+
ightful evening
me of Mra. J. G. Nicholson
Royat Oak, when -members and;
friends of Royal Oak- Women's Insti
tute congregated at @ five hundred
party Seven tables were in play
The prize winners were Ladies, first,
Wr Markers second; dMtrs. F-
Cariss; consolation, Mrs, J, M. Nich-
olson, Gentlemen, first, Mr. H. Long-
land: second, Mr. G. Milnes; consola-
tion, Mr. J: Stell. Delicious refresh-
ments were served and a pleasant
hour enjoyed. Ths next five hundred
party Was announced to take place at
tHe Wayside Inn, East Road, on Wed-
nesday, October 21. Mrs. H. D. Co-
tou and Miss A. Cotou will be the
hostesses of the evening
was spent ati
will be celebrated
of Lampson = Street
Esquimalt High School}
and their friends by a masquerade
and dance to be held in thé audi-
torlum On the evening of Friday, Oc-
tober 30. This annual event is one
of the most popular institutions’ in
Esquimait, not only fer the pretty
spectacie presented by the young
masqueraders as they, march past the
judges, and for the jolly dance Which
follows, but because the funds raised
are used to provide milk for all un-
derweight and undernourished chil-
dren In Esquimalt Ten. first prizes
and ten second prizes are offered tn
the public schools section and four
in the High School section, the fol-
towing. being the different classes for
competition: Pubife schools section:
Boys and giris, national; boys and
girls, historical; boys and girls, ad-
vertisemerit; boys and giris, best and
cheapest; boys and girls, comic
High School section: Boys and #iria,
original; boys and girls, moat strik-
Ing. The Pullen orchestra has very
kindy offered: their-services-for-the
svening and enjoyable music in as<
sured.
Hallowe'en
the children
School and
by
-~_ > +
Mra. J. Reid Clark, 136 Wellington
Avenue, entertained last ¢y ening |
with a miscellaneous shower in honor |
of her sister, Miss Peggy Ross, whose |
marriage takes place on October 17. |
The many handsome and useful gifts
were presented to the guest of honor
In a black and White checkered box
tied with a-large ribbon bow. The
invited *Kuests were: Mra. J, T. Ross, |
Mra. Evans, Mrs, W. C. Hudson, Mra.)
J. Peden, Mrs. W-Peden, Mra, We}
Peden, Mrs. A. Peden, Mra. T. Mof- |
fat, Mrs. R. McLorie; Mrs, W. Lawrie, |
Mrs._W. Moore, Miss Marjorie. Moef-1
fat, Miss Dorothy Thomas, Aliss
Bertha Ross, Miss' Tommie—-Grant.
Grant,Miss Hillle Grant, Miss Jessie |
Paul, Miss Margaret -MeMivian, Miss
Nonte Ross, Miss Lila Pitzer, Miss
ng
SOCIAL AND PERSONAL|
| successful
fevening at tl
) Hatehe
| Mr
another |?
¥
5 mi Be ewe
For
matters
day confer
and this ‘me
Many
Miss
Miss
Mogerey,.
Inez Green
sale of
the ladies of St
the schootroom
aday on,
st encouraging to
Guild who
Winter season. The
1 by the president
Tea was served
of Mra. New-
gable efforts
to
the are
measure
ction, ana” WH
‘ charmed by
of Miss Efiecerr Shet~
b ed that greater inter-
eat wht be taken-in—the—Guild this
as it of the live and very
zations
very fort is
the member-
joining should
telephone the
Mrs. P. Edmund Corby,
un Street, who will be
elcome ‘new members
++ +
Women of Moosecheart Legion Vic
torla’ Chapter ' No 26 held a vy
ai té n Wedn
‘ of lee
about forty being present
was prettily decorated
mn foliage and chrysanthe-
The Senne Wir sport witir
singing and danctt
organ
church, and ¢
reas
ship
send in
ary
thelr n r
ad
The house
Aut
mums,
musile
| lowing taking part in the progra
Miss
Mins Shaw M
Mr. F: Hatcher
Hatche Brother
k Warner of Port Angeles Lodge
ted m pe t The follow-
were present egionairies Par
. Hatcher, Thompson, Os-
Robertson, Laird, Connor
Harris, E. Shaw,
ry Burtholme
ylor, Warner, W
Hatcher, Wil
Mra. Carter
Mrs, Ash-
Miss Burt-
and Mrs
Sparks,
Mr. Nic-
Hatcher and Mr. R
Hatgher Dainty refreshments were
served bythe hostess, assisted by the
soctal committee
F. Sparks, Mr. W
as act
+~ +
A marriage of Interest to the many
friends of the happy cour took
pince at—the—Referned—_t scopal
Church on ‘Getober when the. Rev
De-R. Owen united In marriage Mrs
Mary Ballantyne and Mr, Thomas
Rowan The bride was given in
marriage by her brother, Mr. G. Ken-
nedy, and looked very pretty in her
wedding gown of pale blue georgette
with picture|hat of white crepe de
Chine. She carried a showed bou-
quet of ophelia roses and lillies The
matron of henor, Mrs, A, Carnochan,
the bride's sister, wore a gown of
black silk trimmed with yellow with
picture hat to match, and carried a
bouquet of roses and carnations. Miss
Cecily Webster
pale blue georgete dress with silver
leaves in her hair-qnd earried.a bou-
quet of roses and carnations. Mr. A.
Garnochan was best man
church was. beautifully decorated
with flowérs, and the Choir sang as
the bride entered the church on the
arm of her brother. After the ser-
vice a eption was held at 1230
Government where friends of
the .bride and bridegroom were en
tertained until a late hour. The
bridegroom's gift to the bride was a
gold ring, to the matron of honr a
gold pendant and chain, to the flower
girl a string Of pearls, whilé “the
Brides gift to the bridegroom was a
gold ring. Among the many gitts
Street
was a horse-shoe of white -heather |
from Scotland.
P.-T.A: Meeting—The P.-T.A. of
the Sir James .Douglas Schoo! wil!
hold their _anyjual_meeting In
echeel on- Tue@§ay evening, October
T3-at-8-o'clock:* As the-officers -fer
the coming year &re to be elected,
ard the 3:tsly report of the pbresi-
dent and treasurer will be read, a
foll attendance is hoped for.
MELBA MAY BE
M.P. IN AUSTRALIA
London, Oct, 10.—Dame. Nellie
Melba, famous prima donna, who
has been living in England for a
considerable time,_is announcing
ter return to Australia, says she
may possibly entet politics In the
Commonyealth.
Dame —Meiba,—_"The—Ausiraiian
Nightingale,” waa born near Mel«
_hourne, : Australia... and—took—her-
stage name from that tify. She is
sixty-six years old.
was flower girl, in aj
|
|
The |
connected |.
the}
i
Silas
on
married in New York t
Dellar .
M
Northern: British C¢
was for a
father’s “min
St.
will
p.m
Newbury,
Mark's
Wedn
CeCe CECEEE COCEE CC CCC
Cases
Te RRR CCREERE CECE CECE
will appease
also provide considerable nutrition.
Dr. Louis Fischer, former’ instructor in Dis-
WALTER B
Ac hot;-well made-cup of delicious.
BAKER’S COCOA
these keen a
of Children at the New York. Post
Graduate -Medicat-School- and Hospital; lists
cocoa in diet for school children.
ESTABLISHED 1780
DORGHESTER, MASS.
CANADIAN MILLS AT-MONTREAL
Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free
ail
ii vi ue
——————
Old Dutch)
Old Dutch
>
et Ad GE HANTS
ppetites an
AKER & CO, Limited
cece ce ceccececeterce
Be cae cocecccccecececce
for cleaning
1
“A> inks
Old Dutch assures ‘healthful
cleanliness because the soft,
flaky particles remove all
the grease and dirt
visible
and invisible, leaving the
surface hygienically clean.
Goes further with less labor.
“Contains io hard grit, lye
or acids. Won't scratch. Old
Dutch is good for your”
hands, too. Use Old Dutch
all through the kitchen.
Silas P: Silverman
Weds in | New York
P
Silverman
mining man who made his headquar- }
ters in
pper
Victoria
mines were t
West Const
while
the
Silverman is
lh
wh
intere
Martin's Guild
hetd
be on
the auspices ¢
Guild
Progressive Party—A progressive
drive will t
Men's >
next 8
day
as manager for
Tuesaday
sharp at the home of Mra
800 Gorge R
» well known
» the Tidewater
yeing . de ped
has Just been
fiss Sophie |
in}
he
hist
aiso known
imbia where
sts |
A 600 party |
next at &
Pe 8
un-
Martin's
ad West,
f St
641 Yates
Street
eld by
in the
p.m
the
Hall
st
Blue Monday should have no place in your home.
MONDAY will be
like SUNDAY
CANADA'S GREATEST VALUE
$395.00
KENT'S: xz
Pianos — Phonographs — Radice
You
should not be compelled to give up your day to doing or
supervising lau
ndry work.
Banish the odors and eliminate the worries of wash day
by entrusting your bundles to tis. The table and’bed linen
Our laundry isreally a hospital for sick fabrics.
Washing soda, pure soap and water.act like a tonié, bring,
back. the color to colored goods and freshen and brighten. -
the complexion of the entire wash.
will last longer, will always be snowy white instead of dark
‘_grey, and—yourwearables-will not-show signs of wear-if”
they arg. bathed and washed at our plant.
Refined
One trial will prove that. we can make your linen and
weurables look better; and time will prove that they last
longer than when they are rubbed on a scrub-board week
after week.
_ Make:the Trial Now. Phone Us Monday.
TELEPHONE 2300
| New Method Laundry. Ltd.
ie
VT
Downtown Branch—1115 Douglas, acrass
ST ie ce
see
om D. Spencer's
EE eeeeEE——eE—
—— TEMETTNT _—
“FIRE LOSS WT
~ MORE EDUCATION
Millions Lost Anhwally by
‘Careélesstiess, “Authorities
Claim
To lessen thei fire waste in
Canada,-which annually reaches
an immense figure, the week of
October 4 to 10, inclusive, was
set’ aside and declared ‘Fire
Prevention Week,’’ ina nation-
wide movement to cut down the ex-
travagant irresponsibility of the
public where fire danger is con-
cerned 3
To-day, -Gcieber 10, is thé last day
of the "Fire Prevention Week.” But
the authorities urge that the date
be. not:, it- 4s the hope of
the insurance * ind companies
iat the people of Canada will realize
the necessity of protecting their own
and others’ property against damage
or destruction by fire throughout the
year to come ‘
“Fire © Prevention Week" would
then have served its purpose, aa a
reminder. ;
In 1886 Vancouver, atast growing
coast city at-that time, was destroyed
hy fire, The cause waa a negiscted
clearing blaze. In 1898 New West-
minster-burned from sparks igniting
a haymow. Ania forest fire awept
over and destroyed -Fernie in 1910
That is just a little of the fire da-
mage done in British Columbia in the
past few years. How many thousands
of homes have been destroyed, how
many billions of feet of timber have
falien prey to flames, and how many
millions of dollara worth of proper
ty have beet lost, and all through
carclessness,.. negligence or some
other inexcusable oversight, it-is im
possible to” eariniats.
Common causes of fires from spon-
taneous combustion are olls, paper
waste, benzine, rubbish, oily rags
and paint materials. and = from
thoughtless handling of, matches, g48
fires, cigarettes, _chemiicals, _elec-
tricity, pipe ashes and-ciar stubs.
Throughout. the week Chief. Ver -
hon Stewart hag been lecturing at
the city schools on fire prevention
Me-feets that education will. bea.
great factor in keeping public pro-
perty safe from fire ravages bit
ish Columbia. e
Finally some . advice been
compiled for the perusal of the pub-
tte by insurance authoritteswith—=
view to protection, Thais isin part
as follows
Don't Place heating stoves-on-hare
floors.
Don't place ashes in wooden recep-
tacles.
Keep matches out of reach of chil
dren.
Keep
your basement free from
rubbish, oily rags,
De not hang electric
nail or metal hook
Look where you
cigarette stub
Thorg dre many other such warn-
ings. But the insurance agents. and
companies ask the people of (anada
to take warning, coneerve the pro
perty from fire léss und save the
$45,000,000 that went up in amoke
and “flame last—year,-in the-futere
etc
throw your
C onstantinople Opens
Tourist Campaign
Constantinople, Oct. 10.
nople, city of emperors,
caliphs, has fallen to
Replaced as Turkey's cupital by
Angora and rapidly losing its com
mercial leadership to such Anatolian
ports’as Symra and Mersina, it is to
become chiefly a show place for
curious tourlsta_of other lands
This is the décision of a govern-
ment commission, which a-year ago
the National Assembly .named to
study possibilities for the future of
the city of the Golden Horn
body's findings have just been pub-
lished, and Turkey's first Tourist
Bureau ta being formed. Every effort
should be made, the commission de
cided, to attract tourists to the erat-
while queen of the world’s cities
The perfect, Emine Bay, has trans-
formed the former Sultan's palace
Yilédiz, and its famous gardens, into
a place of public amusement. He has
constructed a permanent
of Turkish wares in the Grand
Pazaar, #0 tourists will be spared the
difficuittes of searching t native
bazaars New regulations are aimed
to make the landing of travelers
easier, to lessen customs difficulties
and standardize services and pay of
porters and guides, -
—Constantl-
sultans and
low estate
TO FLOAT LOAN
Oct. 10.—The agree-
ment to nd Caechoslovakia’s. war
debt to the Tt ted States, Wall Street
bankers bel * will pave the way
for the early flotation of a $50,000,000
chosiovakian tt
New Y«
weep! sores, isonous rashes,
panes ond akin diemishae—
£4 chiens,
meoacy _ Try D.D. D. s0ahy too,
- ae VF ter Bettie wilt be-ewor fer tee
FREE to cover postage, Write D.D.D.
Co. DB, Lyall Ave. Turente.
This}
exhibition |
| overwhelming proportion of the evi
‘BAKER AND SOWASH
+ NOW AWATT RULING
AF APPEAL COURT;
| Vancouver, Oct. 10.—The decision
ofthe Court of Appeal op. th:
[-peals of Harry (Sip Bee e See
| Owen Baker, sentenced to be hanged
November 4, fe now awaited. The
arguments Of Sowasti's appeal were
concluded yesterday and judgment
reserved. Judgment had been re-
| served on Baker's appeal a couple of
days eartier.
JOHNSON'S ARGUMENT |
A. M. Johnson, K.C., sigebiation |
the prosecution, was brief in his
argument yesterday, pointing to evi-
dence in the record showing the con-
nection of Sowash with unlawful
purposes, Partiowlarly he mentioned |
the confesston-at Maret ${ Sowash’s |
statement in the jail, March 23, wien |
he attempted to communicate with
Baker: and the evidence given bythe
condemned man himself at the trial
on June 18, i
Mr. Johnson = declared there had
been no material wrong in the charge
to the jury and that, thérefore, the
conviction should stand.
hR..D. Harvey for Sowash argued
hi pplication in: the morning,—
That lives should be at.stake on
the gstatements of this kind of a man
is .perfpctly terrible.” dedlared Mr.
Justice McPhillips, in reference to
argument that Paul Stromkins, on
whose. testimony the prosecution
chiefly _relied—at the trial, was an
accomplice
HARD TO BELIEVE
The story of Stromkins that. So
wash killed the boy Giilia sounds to
me like a concoction,” said the judee
“Why sheuld they let the boy wan
der around the boat: for
so After his father (WJ Gillis) had
tae Shot? ‘It is incomprehensible to}
me. ©ne must apply one’s
jutigment’~
Chief Justice Macdonald ld
Harvey it was of no use to auth
orfties on the question of common
unlawful purpose,
“Evidence of that ts either given by
Sowawh Himeelf or it is not,”
Chief Tustice
Mr. Harvey replied that he did not
pargue there was such eviden
Wis” pomt war that “iis teal fides
thad decided the question in his
charge to the Jury Instead of leay
ing the issue to thé jury tc
} mine
INQUIRIES NEEDED
‘In future cases where operatives
ore employed. the Crown should
quire into their history. Baker might’
seem to have pulled the wool éver
the eyes of the potice tn this cam
said Mr, Justice McPhillips, referring
® that Baker had’ ob
ain information from
rdinary
Mr
said the
'
'
Tidak Pea :
Came From North
Tokto, Oct, 6&.—Dr. Ryuzo Tortl,
formerly of the Tokio Imperial Unt-
versity and one of the foremost au
therities im Japan “or arthrophtogy;
is of, the opinion that the Japanese
ace originated in the North and not
In the South Seas. .Dr. Torll was
quoted recently as stating that the
evidence indicated that the larger part
of the stock from which the race de
veloped migrated from Corea, Siberia
Manchuria .
part
cohut rth of this ts
forejg
wentt
he said
who matir t at
tstands we
Anese mice and their acrumes
}te some extent cenvincing to
| amateur tis ene r reiener
jumy ‘
eationa
The s
sone
the
basis of
study is made
enttures of the early
Japan
parts of
“There were
on this island be
and
bronze instruments
copper drums which
earthed In various parts of Chugoku,
Shikoku, Tokkaido and Kaga are sim-
ilar to thosé Which have been found
in. Yunnan, Indo-Chioa and Siam
| potnt {se aA great f evidence
ween the prehist«
}
protohistori« sed
ares
The
whe
designs on
have been un
deal of
pointing ¢t Malay origin, but the
dence points to Kores
Siberia.”
Free Milling Ore
Is Found at Head |
of the Magee Pass
Stewart, B.C. Oct. 3 (By Mail)
W. it. Harner, partner! of Hemer}
Ficklin In thé High. Grade group of
élaims; a recent discovery at the
head _of Magee Paes in the Marmot |
Rover section, was this week show-
| ing fn a smafi ftying pan a gold pros-
| pect he had panned from a selected
| sample of ore. It showed about an/
inch’ of “pin-point" gold, following
the usuel residué of black sand mixed
with powdered galena, and looked as
theugh the reck from which it came
| should run away up in gold. How-|
ever, the ayerage assay taken across
the vein, which Is the third vein
found on the property by Ficklin,/
gave $11 in gold, $32.10 In silver and
»$16.80.1n lead. a total value of $59.70
per ton, Another sample gave 3
in gold alone but this does not rep-
resent the AVerage, Which represents}
elght feet In width
The new vefn was found since the
examination made by R, G: Mellin,
the well known mining engineer, who}
reported most favorably on the show-
tng that he-saw
The new vein runs from three to
elght. feet in width and will average
about six feet. The ore is a decom-
posed quartz, with-some free gold
and gaiena showing.| It has been
traced through the property for a
distance of 2.000 feet.
Pack horses can be put through to
the showings with a minimum of
trail construction, and Messrs. Har- |
yer nnd Fickiin have” gone up te
figure Gut a scheme of active devel-
opment work and production. The.
' claims are only seven miles from
i dean water transvortation. «
Manchuria and
}Canada.”
| immigrant
| ada.”
} to ain time or
HT OF CHLGARY
Audience Also Heard Senator
G._D. Robertson and Hon.
R. B. Bennett
Calgary, Oct. 10—Rt. Hon. Arthur
‘Wétktien, “Conservative ~~ teatet> ate
He said one of the
Conservatives
should be given
to the transportation of coal f
berta to the ‘more Bastern parte of
The Conservatives, he sald, recog-
niged that the West and extreme Bast
bore undue shares of the: burden of
transportation costs. When the basis
of rates was fixed Le f the proper tetbunal,
the requirement of equalization might
neceasitate contributions by the whote
Dominion to the reduction of the un
fair burdens borne by the wont and
the Maritimes.
But Canada, he thought. would nevér
be in a position to golive her railway
problems unless industry was. stimulat-
ed and. fuilway traffic . increased,
Tariff reform, he said, was the only
way to solve the problem.
OTHER SPEAKERS
Senator G. D. Robertson dealt briet-
ly with labor problems throughout
Canada, =
Hon. R. B. Bennett, discussing
immigration, said there were many
thousands of Britishers anxious to
settie in Canada if there -was-work
for them. There was & lot of money
available #in Britain to dseist over-
aene-eetiiament, bat to-day he claimed
more people were going from Canada
to the United States| than there were
settlers coming in. “The
reason, he thought, was that there
was no work for those golng out, just
as there was no inducement to new
setllers
CANDIDATE'S VIEWS
}. Bevis, Conservative candidate in
Baat Calgary, favored an_export duty
on wheat entering. the United States,
intended for. milling into export
flour. He thought precedent fer tis +
jev tf the action of the Liniled Slates
in imposing Reavy duties on Cana-
didn cathe” Retattation againet-the
United States was due, he said. It
had been said that if the Meighen
Government came back “not one ton}
of American. coal would enter Can-|
FRENCH DEBT PLAN
MAY BE VOTED OUT
Franklin-Bouillon’s Opposi-
tion to U:S> Scheme Dis=~
cussed by Deputies
10.— With the retur
ster Caillaux to Fra
wm the debt-funding confer-
ce at Washington, it seems appar
storm clouds are beginning to
hover which, when they break may
swoep away the tentative debt agree-
ment
M. Calllaux ts expected to make his
report to the Cabinet and the Finance
Committee of the Chamber of Depu-
ties before to-night But already the
tentative plan calling for an annual
payment of $40,900,000 for five years
hrs met with oppesitien from a aourns
strong enough, in the opinion ot ob-
servers, that it will militate against
final passage by Parliament of the
project
MUCH DISCUSSION
- comes from no jess
klin-Boull,
a& personage than
lon, president. of the ign Rela
tions Committee of the Chamber
M. Frank! Boutllon considers the
Washington arrangement as “attempt
the basis of postpon-
ing a definite solution for five years.”
The statement of M,. Franklin-Bou-
lion has set the ical world talk-
vz, for it his opinion as
resident reign Retations
Committee will mean reje
project—that ta, if precedent t
lowed by the deputies when they are
called upon to vote on the question
BG MINING MOVE
COMING IN NORTH
Stewart. B.C., Oct. 3 (By Mall)
The Portland Canal News makes the
editorlal announcement
which Is causing considerable com-
ment throughout the north
“This Portland Canal District has
experienced, and is now expertencing,
real. mining —activity; but we hope
that In the course of the next few
weeks we will have for our readers
news of some of the biggest mining
development ever undertaken in this
district
“Release of this at the moment !
would be premature, but apparen yi
two or three situations are working
to a Very satisfactory climax and
should reach consummation within a
short time.” , |
following
Premier Mine Installs |
Immense Oil Tanks
Stewart, B.C. Oct, 3 (By Math—
The foundation for the huge ofl stor-
ace ‘tank now in course of construc-
tion, near the Stewart wharf by the
Premier, Gold Minjng -Company _ is
completéd and the steel work la now
sweliunder way. When completed the
tank will store 20,000 barrels or 1,-
000,000,000 gallons of off,. The fou
dation is built of stone and tonerete
and is five feet in height”: Owing to
the sharp incline of the mountainside
where the tank will stand, consider-
o fabie rock. werk KAS DOCRSBAL 10 Igyeh
off a space for the foundatio’
bia niet. drum in which the off will
be stored will be seventy-five feet
in. diameter and will stand between
forty-five and‘ fifty feet above the
ground level. *e e
A DEEP-LAID SCHEME
said Jack's wite to her
tty caller, “I wish you'd telephone
ay husband and ask him if he
thought I'd mind If you were to dine
with us to-night.” ,
“But, dear, you know [ can't dine
«with—_you. _What's_the idea, any-
way”
“1 asked him to-day to get a hair-
cyt ahd a shave and spruce Ups bit,
ut he Salt he was too huss
When a man Cotitiner-tustness
‘with pleasure, business usually gets
the shart.end of it
“Petty,”
VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925”
‘IMEIGHEN SPOKE IN.
’
Ste hits he
_ of Underwear Values
The advantages of collective
buying for our long chain of
stores are forcibly demon-
strated in the wonderful values
which we are able to offer in
Men’s, Women’s, Boys’ and
Girls’ Winter Underwegr. Pur-
‘chasing in huge-quantities di-
rect-from, reliable manufactur-
ers our buyers are enabled’ to
secure the most depenslable
tiakes at lowest-possible prices.
The full benefits of this advan-
tageous buying ‘are at oncé
apparent when you see our well
assorted stocks and note the
extremely low prices. at which
the garments are marked.
Make your selections now while
stocks are so complete.
Complete Stocks of
Women’s Knit Underwear
in Harvey's, Watson's,
Turnbull’s and Other
Dependable Makes
Vests
Medium weight Knit cotton vests,
slightly fleeced, plain or ribbed,
opera top. butit-up shoulders or
short sieeves,..cream _or..white,
sisea 46 to 44. Price 79¢
Bloomers to Match Above Vests .
In cream and white;-also pink
and orchid; sizes” 36 to 44
Price
Vests
In—heavs—kait—cotion—with—ailk
stripe, built-up shoulders or short
sleeves; sizes 36 to 44 Price
“ta s+ dl. 00.
Bioomers to Match Above Vests
Sises—_3¢—to 44, Price....61.00
Vests
In fihe fiéeced catton
or built-up shoulders
sieeves
Sizes 36 to 42 $1.35
Sise 44. Price $1.50
Bloomers to Match Above Vests
Sizes 36 to 42. Price....91.35
Size 44. Price
Vosts
Pure wool veats, opera top, bullt-
up shoulders or short sieeves;
sizes 36 to 42. Price.....93.76
Drawers to Match Above Vests
Kise dF KnRIS Tengthy open” or”
closed styles; sizes 36 to 42.
Price 2.83.75
Wool Vests
Natural woo! vests, high neck and
long sleeves; sizes 26 to 42
Price 62.50
Drawers to Match Above Vests
Ankle length, sizes: 36 to 42
Price $2.50
Combinations
In medium-weight fleeced cotton,
others In cotton and silk mixture
bullt-yp shoulders, V-heck, short
sleeves and knee length
Sizes 36 to 42 Price
Size 44. Price
Combinations
in cotton, wool and silk mixtare,
built-up shoulders or short
sleeves and knee length
Sizes 26 to 48. Price
Size 44. Price
Combinations
In medium weight wool, bullt-up
mee Na short sleeves and knee
lengt Sines, 326 to 42. Price
at
opera top
also short
Price
$1.95
. $2.25
Girls’ -and infants’
Underwear
The prices are low but qualities
are of the most dependable kind,
as we stock only those lines which
we know will give the maximum
of service and comfort.
Infants’ Vests
Fleece-lined
fronts and
menths to 2 years.
Infante’ Vests
In sik and wool mixture,
buttoned front and long sleeves;
sizes 3 to 9 months. Price, $1.15
Staes 1 and 2 years. Price, $1.35
Infants’ Vests
In wool mixture; sizes 3 months
to. 1 year. Price....
infants’ Vests
In pure wool;
3 years.
Girls’ Vests
Fleece-Hned, ‘with. short .or long
sleeves; sizes 6. to 14 years.
Prices according to size, 85¢
WO genes
Girls’ Vests
in wool and cotton mixture, with
V-neck and short sleeves; sizes
4 to 16 years. Prices, $1.25
In wool and silk mixture, with
Vor high fiecke and short
sleeves; sizes 2 to 14 yeara.
Prices according to size, $1.75
to. ar i
vests with buttoned
jong sleeves; sizes 3
Price...65¢
Girls’ Bloomers
Pleece-lined garments in navy
and came|* sizes € to 14 years.
Price, ...>5--+ +1... 60¢
Girls’ Bloomers ;
Fieede-lined, in navy only; sizes
4 to 12 years. Price -B8¢
Girls’ Combinations
Fleece-lined, with short or long
sleeves, knee or ankle léngth;
sizes 3 to 14 years. Prices ac~
CONE to site, BLO tw SL. 75
—Ficor Two, H.B.C.
a ee
Cre RIESE TEL
High Grade Damask Cloths and
Napking at Low Prices
Miscantinued patterns bought at a favor
able price Made from
finest flax yarns absolutely: perfect
in weave. Will -give—sturdy -wear--and
stand up well in the laundry
All Linen Damask Cloths
70x70
70x88
ago
TIx108.
linen
doten
concession
and
Sine
Size
Sine
Size
All
Per
Price
¥rice
Price
napkins to match; ‘size U2xu2.
$4.08
Heavy All. Linen Damasic- Clothe
Ta striped
Price ;
Napkins to match
dozen
patterns only;
T2x72.
$4.98
Per
$6.98
size
size 22x22
All Linen Damask Giothe
mrock lily
Price
72x90
and designs nize
$4.98
Size $6.98
Price
All Linen Damask Clothes A aie =<
Piain—_centrea—with—corded
quality for general uso
Size 46246. Price
Size 56x62. Price
Size 72x72. Pri
Napkins” to match si
dogwen ....
border; fine
Per
85.98
Hemetitohed Damask Cloths
Pure Irish Ithen, nicely hemstitched and
finished with neat two-inch
68x65. Price
Size 72x85
Hematitched
20x20.
/
hem; sire
83.50
$4.50
match; size
Pri
, Napkins
Per doren
For Quick and Courteous Service. Phone 1670
~ Private Exchange Connecting Ail Departments
udsons Dan Comp
INCORPORATED 2Nb MAY. 1670 °°
-OctoberSa
il §
of Linens
All housewives who take a pride in tlieir home, love to"have
a plentiful supply of table linens, Here is an opportunity
to stock up with pure Irish linen cloths and napkins, and
fancy pieces, at-a-big saving in price. Some of the offer-
ings are marked at actually half.the regular price.
The
gift season will soon be here, Why not start making se-
now ‘and
benefit by these “ex=
traordinary ‘savings.
The- sale COMMENCES,
Monday, and will com
tinue all week.
lections
Farey Linens at Half Price
We have just received a further consign
ment of hand embroidered Irish linens
Hundreda of pieces, Beautiful specimens
of clever workmanship and of beautiful
dosign. This offering includes_.doilies,
mats, tray clothe, squares, scarves and
centres, featiiring drawn ‘thread, eyelet
aneé--embroei4ers—work, For your per-
Soial Hees HF fOr the COMIN RIT season
you wil -weleome -thit- unusual~ offer
Monday Half Price
Irish Hand-woven. Damask- Cloths
At important price reductions. . Included
in this exceptional offering are ‘the fol-
“owing peprice designs: Witow, Wattent=
and Chrysanthemum
Size T2K7T2. Price
Bise 72x90. Price
Size 772x105 Price
Napkine to- match;
dozen
Size
patterna.
$9.98
$11.98
$14.95
size 22x22.
$12.06
-» $14.95
24x24. Per dozen
All Pure Linen Damask Cloths
_Irish_malnufactured and fully bleached,
in Robin Hood, very exceptional value.
Size T2x72. Price . $7.98
Size 72x90. Price $8.08
Size 72x108. Price $10.98
Napkins to match, Q2x22 Per
doxen 89.98
size
f
Damask Cloths
In Elgin marbles Gesign; a favorite of
linen lovers. Hand’ woven and made of
finest super quality Irish linen.
Size 72x72. Price
Price
Price
match;
Size 72x90
Size 172x108
Napkins to size 24x24. Per
en se ree 16.95
To MakeHome More Comfortable |
During the Winter Season
Now that the Winter months.are almost here
you will be spending a good deal more time
in the home. On
or two extra pieces of fur
niture, a cosy lamp or a new rug would help
to make your rooms just that much more comfort
Look over this list or, better still, come in
and Jook over our large and-varied stockeof Pur-
niture and Furnishings and see how little you need
spend to bring those added
your liome.
touches of comfort to
In addition to the advantages of low
prices we extend to-you the privileges of our Easy
Payment Plan
10% Cash
Balance in Nine Monthly Amounts
Solid Oak Dining-room Suite
Consisting of buffet, extension table
and set of slip seat diners: in fumed
finish, Spectal at, per
$97.50
value
in: golden finish Consists of buffet
extension table and-set of six dining
chatra. Special value at, per
sulie .. ... $117.00
Extension Table and ‘Chairs to Match
With genuine leather slip seats, fumed
finish. Special: value at, com
MINS oak sss casadeeaes .. $65.00
Walnut and Dark Oak Tea Wagons
Of superior make and finish. ec
at, each
Walnut China’ Cabi
With two glass doors.
eich ‘
Wainut Living-room Suite
Uphola#tered in mohair. Consists of
aettee, arm chair, arm rocker, Chester
table and upholstered bench, ‘Special
at, por suite’... . $165.00
Reed Living-room Suite
With «spring seats and = cretonne
"FERRE. SHECIPAT, Per site SSS-00
Fumed Oak Jardiniere Stands
Special at, each
Walnut Drop Leaf Tables
Special at, each
Special at,
832.50
Walnut Finished Drop Leaf
Extension Tables
Special at, each
Walnut Finished Windsor Chairs
Special at, each °
Watnut Library Tables
With drawer and pair of book ends.
Special at, sach . :, $21.00
Tapestry Upholstered Easy Chairs
Special at, each . : $22.75
Upholstered Chairs
+ Covered with English corduroy. Spe-
cial at, each... ‘ . 835.00
Tapestry Upholstered Easy Chaire
Reg. $35.00, Special at, cach, $29.50
Uphelstered Bedroom Benches
In white and ivory enamel finish
Special at, each ... $4,905
Square Parlor Tables
In fumed finish. Special, each $4.50
Dark Oak Umbrella Stands oo
Regular $11.50. Special at, each $8.50
Drop Side Steel Couches
With cretonne pads.
eaca + hae
Dark Oak Divanettes
~ Special at, each
Floor Lamps
Complete..with imahosaby shalt and
attractive shade, in a number of colors.
Speeial at, complete .. $17.45
Junior Floor Lamp Standards
Plain and polychrome finish, regular
$21.00. Special at, each... 17.50
Floor Four, HBC,”
Special at,
Low Prices on Fine Wilton Rugs
Worsted Wilton Rugs of finest imported quality.
patterns that will appeal to lovers of beautiful-
Size 6.9x9.0. Price $42.50
Size 9.0x9.0. Price ....,.$52.50
un =
‘Shown in the newest
Size 9.0x10.6. Price ......
Size 9.0x12.0._ Pric
w 10 S
00° Dozen: Pure-Irish
Linen Huck Towels
at a Third Off
An-exceptional” offering and one that
cane for early morning shopping. Fine
woven towels with hemstitched ends
and fancy demask borders. Shown in
all the wanted sizes from the small
guceet towel to large hand aise
MONDAY, ONE-THIRD OFF
REGULAR PRICES
—Main Fioor, H.B.C
a Zz
A Special in Napkins
Guaranteed pure Irish | linen,
bleached and extra heavy quality.
patterns inelude ~ polka dot:
stripes; size 20x20. Per dozen
grass
The
rose “and
. 5.98
Warranted all linen, very attractive in
a}fpearance and exceptional vnives at
the prices quoted... Choice of bive, pink
or yellow borders; size 54x54 Priced
at P sini
Size 64x64. Price
Napkins :
Irtst manufacture, plain
satin band border; size 22x22 Per
i. dozen : as $2.98
Pure Linéh Hemetitened-Tea-Napkins_
A limited quantity only. Made from pure
Irigh linen of fine even weave, with neat
hemsatitched borders. Very speci at,
per dozen . $3.75
Unbleached Damask Cicths
Made from sturdy linen and cotton yarns
in the famous dice pattern and hemmed
ready for uee.
Size 54x64. Price .....
Size S7x58.- Price vss...
Sise 63263. Price
Unbleached Table Damask
A splendid sturdy quality for everyday
use; shown in dice pattern.
64-inch. Per yard ....-.--
S8-ineh,.. Par. vard .....>
Unbleached Damask |
Special all linen, heavy, dependable
quality, and shown in attractive designs,
will give the maximum of good weer, and
withstand rough usages in the laundry;
68 inches wide. Per yard
Free Instruction in Cut
Work
On-Monday, Tuesday, Thursday-andPridar
next, in the mornings from 10 to -12 and
afternoons from 2 to 5, we will hold a special
Instruction Class in.Cut Work to which we
cordially invite you. ‘
We mention just a few of the many Items
suitably stamped for this. work =™
Pillow Cases. $1.36 3-piece BuffetSete,
Linen Towels, T5¢ B5¢ and:...81.25
and .. B5¢ Tuck - in Pillows,
Linen Centres at at x .T5e
$1.00 and $2.00 Tray Cloths....75¢
Luncheon — Sets. at Mereanite Floor,
H.B.C.
Three Days’ Sale of Drug
Sundries
This is the time of the year when one
should take a personal inventory and
condition. oneself so as to get over the
changeable. season without the usual
coughs, colds ayd otfer Winter. ills.
During this Three Days’ Sale, com-
meneing Monday, we are offering at
special low prices a wide variety of
reliable remedies and drug sundries, all
bearing our guarantee of quality and
satisfaction.
Scotts Emulsion,
Palatable Cod
centres” with
sesesss Oe
83¢
large site..... eax
.. 8Te
iver Oil Compound.
Parrish’s Chemical Food, 5-02...
Electric Oil, 350 value
Pain Killer, 500 valie..
Listerine, medium size...
Hydrogen Peroxide, 26c value.....-.
Absorbent Cotton, 1-Ib. rolls .......
Bandages, Ibe Valle...
Tincture of lodine, special dropper....23¢
Oil of Eucalyptua,.250 value. °
Camphorated Oil, 25c value,...
Kasagra, 260 Walue.........
Hot, Water Bottles, 2-year
eee ee eee ery
2B, value
DED HHH enn Amechae
ure
sai
of Canada|
“That they all may be one.”
Great Spiritual Campaign |
———
.
October 11 to 25, 1925
FIRST WEEK
jocal auspices,
Meetings will he held in cach local church under
SECONT: WEEK-—Mass meeting will be helt ip Metropolitan
United Church
1
For Full Particulars See Programme
Cor..Pandora and
REV. w, J.
REV. A,
Associate Pastor and
G. A. Downard, Chpirmaster
10 a:m
11 a.m,
“My Father for Anpther
Sqlo—“Thanks Re to
Mrs.
Anthem
Soprano God”
A, W.
Quadra
giois
“Metropolitan United Churcl
SIPPRELL. 0.0., Pastor
K. McMINN BA.
Director of Rel
© Enieaen ot
&. Parsons, Organist
‘ase Meetir
‘The Church of God’ —Dr. Sipprell
Night" ....
Stdkes
Raldwin
Dickson
Sacrament of ‘the Lord's Supper
2.39 .p.m
7.30 p.m.—Speaker,
Boys’ Work ‘Secretary,
“Hark, Hark My, Soul’
Solos, Mra. 8° Morton and
Tenor Solo— ‘When I Survey
7 Mr, N.
Special Devotional Services .in
Canipaigh, all week, Morday,
Anthem
NOTE
Oct
Mrs. DL.
connéction
1? to Fri
Let Us Wwereule God!
Counell,
SHunday School and Bible Classes
LOU A. BUCKLEY, M.A.
National
Toronto
Shelly
Kright
the Woendreus Cross”
Collins
.. Stainer
with
day, Oct
the. Spiritual
16
“CENTENNIAL. UNITED CHURCH
GORGE ROAD
REV, J. P, WESTMAN, Pastor
ht am
730 p.m
“MAN vs
Goo”
“The Value of a Fool”
The pastor will be In
Come “in time for
charge of
both
the big sing
services
FAIRFIELD. UNITED CHURCH
REV.
Firs st Presbyterian Church
+.
'
“Hampshire and Belmont.
4
.
Pastor
Rm. W. LEE
i240 Mors St
Phone 2550-R
Opens of
Ll am The
Soloist
Sabbath
Spiritual
: Mr. J
Dm School
7.30 p.m,
Hearty Singing
Special Meetings Every Night Next Wee
Moss Street
SUNDAY NEXT
Campaign
ik Great
You Are Inyited
Where Religion inspires
United” Church or Canada
Corner Quadra and Balmoral Streets
Minister—REV. W. G. WILSON, M.A, DD
Sunday Services
m
LORD'S SUPPER
" BLIC WORSHIP,
held for members
nav. DR. WILSON wi
Strangers will be made heartily w
He conduct
following which a
unable
to
both
elcome at
attend in
Organist and@
Chotr Leader
MAJOR H. WATTS
Shunamite Woman”
Collings
and Bible Classes
“SITTING ON THE FENCE”
A Real Cheery
Service
Spiritual Campaign
CELEBRATION OF THE SACRAMENT OF THE
ef Sacr
the
services.
these srevices
“THIS DO IN REMEMBRANCE OF ME”
JAMES BA BAY HARVEST FESTIVAL
il am-
Me.
30 gm
Special Anthems by
Eden, Mra Crave, a
and J. W Buc
Address by Pamore
Reautiful Decorations
Wednesday,
Address, Rev. R. W
Sucial Hour
Soloist
Herbert Steenson
foloists: Mrs. 8S
Short
Lee—"The United
Relmont Avenue, i1
Rev, Frank Hardy,
am
Pastor
Orge
Harvest
the Choir
Petch,
kler
Churc
Hampshire Road, 1!
Rev
wm
“A HARVEST GREETING”
Anthems
SPECIAL MUSICAL SERVICE
George Smethurst
“THE ETERNAL PROGRAMME”
Specia
CONGREGATIONAL RALLY |
Muste
at § pm
and the Community”
Refreshments
and
Biliott,
a.m 7.3 pm
Assistant
Victoria West United Church. |}
McPhereon Avenue
sll am.-
7.30 pm
7.20 pm
Come and Worship
Sunday School
REV. W.
and Bible
With Us
NM. SCOTT, Minister
“Wrestiing With Circumstances—God"
Class
“Christ's Great Appeal to Men”
St. Columba, Oak Bay
UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA
The minister, Rev. J. H. White, M.A;
Sunday School, 2
will preac
” pm
oh at both services,
Special Spiritual Campaign Services every evening beginning
at & ‘o'clock.
‘
“The Triumph of Righteousness”
‘Millions Now Living
Will Never
Dies
Speaker——S. Av CATER——of Vancouver
SUNDAY, 7.30 p.m. AT “THE PLAYHOUSE,” YATES ST
Auspices International Bible Students’ Association
Seats Free
All Welcome
No Collection
Dr. T, W. Butler,
Speaker
-
Orange Haut
Courtney St.
ul —“THE SUPREME BUSINESS OF LiFe”
o TART ROLOGN, Tuk mine AND RELIGION”
ae Lo ene
sie Children's School at
AK Are Cerilally
_Heaiing. Meeting, .Wednenday Evening,
I o'clock
Invited
4 Mount
Edward Apartments
BAY CHURCH
O) HARVEST
~ PESTWAL SERVICES
‘Church Lavishly Decorated
| and Special Anthems Will
bes Be Sung
|. A busy week : will be
}at the James Bay
| hext week. = It
Sunday by Hal
entertained
United Church
i! be Inaugurated on
est Home Services,
; The church will be decorated by
| flowers and fruits and yégetabies;
the cholf will render special anthems
{and the Te Deum. will be sung ut-t
SraTnine service. In the evening the
¢ehoir have prepared a special musical
service of a high order, amd the
pastor will deliver a short Address
on “The Programme of the Eternal.”
| Mtr-Best will also preach in the
Lmorning on “A Harvest
| During. the fdlowtng -week,in.ac-
cordance —with the -petiey. “of the
whole United Church, the whole week
will be given over to special services
On Monday there will be a meeting
of the boards und _organizattons of
the Church, and the pastor will speak
}n “The United Church in James
| Bay” on Tuesday a rally of ali the]
oung peoplé of the community, ad-
aheoena “by Rev A. K.. McMinn;
‘ We Inesaday will be a big night, being
a. rally of the whole congregation,
when every member and adherent is
expected to be present; Rev. R. W.
i Lee of Fuirficid will speak—on “The.
tnited Cherch and the Community,”
| to be f6NoOwed by A socal hour at
the whole future policy and
of the church will be freely
| discussed. On-Thursday the meet-
ing will be addressed by REv. J. H
White. of St. Columba, and of Fri-
Lday Rev. W.M ott of Victoria
Wee area Mes Ne expected oF
the ser, and all the people of
ithe ited C hureh in the community
are at atter
(ONAL SECRETARY
AES HERE
Lou. A. Buckley. of Y.M.C.A,|
Arrives Here Sunday; to De-
liver Several Addresses
Tau <A, Buckle)
Work Secretary
es
National
be a visitor
and Mondas
A very ¢
11 and 12
programme
e|
are
ested in th
ized hors
is s gly en «
organ
vitatior
rk com
tuckley
work sits anada from coast
throw
vari
te coast
some
is local
In the
problems
x Mr
Metroy
will
speak fro Church
Speer tebt
'n Monday morning
High & and Normal
where he
he, will alt
the Schoo
PREACHER AT
O7. ANDREW'S FROM
GUATEMALA CITY:
Rev.. James “Hayter will!
Occupy Pulpit at Evening
Service on Sunday
James Hayter
Central America,
“Andrew s Church to-morrow eve
ting at 7.20 o'clock, Mr. Hayter, while
serving as the minister of the Pres-
; byterfan Church th Guatamala for
ithe past seven years, has also super-
vised the work of forty outside eta-
tions
of Guatamala
will preach In
DR SIPPRELL TO
OCCUPY PULPIT AT
METROPOLITAN
“The Church of God” Will be|
| Subject. at-Morning- Serviee-
Rey. Dr. W. J. Sipprell. pasto® of
the Metropolitan United Church, has
returned to the city from Toronto,
where be has been attending the
meetings of the Mission Boards, and
| will occupy the pulpit at the -atetro-
litan Church on Sunlay mornin
wr. Sipprell's subject will be: “The
Church of God.”
-L,..A,_Buckiey, M.A. National
Boys’ Work Secretary of the Y.M.C.A,,
wil] give the address at the evening
iaervice Mr. Buckley will speak at
;the Y.MLCA., also, at 4 o'clock on
| Sunday -
Special devotional services will be
| ned all week, Saturday excepted, at
ti Metropeliten_Churchin—ecoennee-
tion with the great Dominion-wide
| epi ritual campaign carried on by the
boone Church ‘for two weeks in
Greeting.” |
+—"FRe—Rev-
work in the local church, to enable
the membership. to, get.a new.
of: their opportunity and to lead to
consecrated co-operation in the work
Some department of the church will
“recelve special atterftion each night
throughout the week, and the front
seata-will be reserved for the workers
Whd: others in that department.; On
Monday evening the young people will
be given prominence and the Young
People's Society of the former Con-
gregational Church will join forces
with the Metropolitan Society. Tues-
day. evening will be Church boards’
night, Wednesday evening will be
Church members’ night, Thursday
evening will be devoted to Women’s
organizations and on Friday evening
special emphasis will:be placed on the
value of co-operation by departments.
Kach mecting wifi be open to the
public. and all classes and ages are
heartily “welcome:
BAPTISTS TO HOLD
ANNUAL WIEETING IN
EMMANUEL CHURCH
Conference of Island As-
sociation of Baptists Set For
October 16
The annual meeting of the Island
Aasociation of Baptists will be held
in Emmaviuel Baptist Church of this
clty on Friday, October 16 At the
aftefnoon session.an address will be
given by"Revo "Willard Litch, Pad;
superintendent of Baptist. Missions in
} British Columbia and-—Atberta: At
Thé same session there will be a con
ference on. “Purposés of Wership”
}.to- be opened with an address by
Deacon Wiiliam Marchant, and a
CONTerence Oi MesIoiary Work Tet
représentatives of the Women's
Miastenary Society of the denomina
tion Supper will be served in
mat 6.15 by
Emmanuel Ct
of offieers Wl take
aml an opportunity will be given to
discus ‘ affecting the asae
ation, ° 12 eY 5 session wilt
begin 7 wi ® song service
Aa — Mivee—Nangiine-
tl lead the devotional part of
ing Addresses will be
president, the Rey. E
Sieatacs hy Dr J
Re W. P. Freeman per
nt @ voung ‘peoples’ and Stn
we in British Colum
Lis of meetings is to Intensify the
place
the
given by
M. Cook,
Willard Ligeh
v ard Lieb |
brs
au
|
of Emmar
vide special
ning meeting An excellent
Baptists on Vaneouver Isiand ts
| expected for this annual meeting
i Iso been arranged that on
sion of his visit to the city
WP Freeman wit!
a conference on Sunda;
work. This conference wil
Thursday evening Octo
clock in. the rday
wel Church
music for the
rally
| the Rev
duct
een
school +
be held}
room
Officore and,
city schools|
gather to listen to, and discuss
matters affecting the religious edu- |
cation of the children and young peo
i ple
HARVEST SUPPER AT
FOUL BAY SUCCESS,
\St. Mathias’ Congregation!
Held Affair at School Last |
bs
,
ach
the ‘three
|
About | 235
bourtiful su
down to
l la night at 6.20
| the aualtriiin of the. Margret)
Jenkins’ School. The occasion was
the Harvest Festival. of St. Matt-|
hias Church, Foul Bay. During sup-
per a most delightful programme
was rendered by the talented mem- |
bers of Major W. H. Watt's orcheatra. |
The incumbent, Rev. H. T
bold, in a very brief and
complimented the ladies, lun
der the leadership of Mra. Hartie
pa Mra, Bengough, on the very fine |
ead. He thanked the men’s com-
| maittee led by Mr. Carey and Mr
Re ugh, for the arduous work of
|Sifatr, the and preparation for ‘the
opie
hin
Areh
witty |
Fpeech,
affair, the young ladies of the A.Y¥
P.A., who waited on the: tables, the
artists. who contributed to the pro-
grammer the School Board for the
use of the bullding, Mesars Wellers
ohd Masters for donations of dishes.
pcutlery etc. and the many others,
who by contributions of food and
labor had helped to make the affair
a success. He anhounced that he
"was very ambitious to see an exten-
sion of the church tn the near future
The prizes for those who sold the
most tickets were given to Master
Robbie Carey_and the Misses. Hart-
ley and Brooker. z
The programme was as follows:—
Violin solo, Mra. G. W. Rayden;
soprano solo, Mra-—R. W:. Tipper:
tenor solo, Mr Pryant mrsient
monolorue, .Miss Hayman, Major
Watt at the plano; tenor solo. Mr
tryant; soprano solo, Mra. R. W.
Tipper; recitation. Mra. Cummings;
| violin duet, Mra. G. W. Rayden_ and
Misa Mary Warren,
SALVATION. ARMY
Adjutant Junker, Adjutant Fuller-
tercant® Ensign Pox havé gone to
Winnipeg to attend the annual con-
gress, which will be presided over
this year. by Mrs General Booth.
The Citadel’ Band, under _band-
master FE. Bent, will be in chatge of
the morning and evening services
‘it the Citadel to-mortow, and play
at the Jubilee Hospital in the after-
noon.
The corps and local officers are
grateful to all who helped to make
« recent Harvest Festival a success.
he proceeds will be uséd entirely
for branches of the Army's work In
western Canada, the local corps in-
chided; -
St. aricepee eM eg -Divine serv-
Ages will LB, Aidan’s_U
jgee-wil Rr ‘olm Sunday, Batt h-
ber 11 at_tl cut gate T7T pm The
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will
October. The purpose of the first be dispensed at the morning servicee.
| mer
| Mitchell
Ye
Al-
one of the as-
at St. Joseph's
Cathedral, Oklahoma City, Is said
to be the only full-blooded In-
dian Catholic priest in the world
sate is. a of the. Potta-
yatomie
twenty-two years
hood,
UNITED CHURCH
OPENS SPIRITUAL |
CAMPAIGN HERE
Meetings in City Will Extend!
From October 11 to 25 With |
Exchange of Puipits +
INDIAN PRIEST—Father
bert Negahnquet,
sistant priests
d- has served
in the priest- |
|
great
1 by the {
ed Church of
Turt® inet
meeting it
gress throughout
arrangement
} special corms»:
pointe by the
ret meeting last
meetings
lay and exten
) weeks from October
The
mor
comme
over
first wee
in each
NYsprer
pul
milriis
week of campaign
tings will be i im the
pelitar: tontted ert
er of United Church
i district will be present
service Rev. “Tir
of gmcouver will giv
closing. address of the campaign
ject The Assurs
exchange of
by the
nd
out
at each
on
su
tory.”
Prominence
people and
each local «
evening of th e
Monday évening; Oct
rally of all young peo:
be — helt
| Church when
be carried
Full Informat
programmes which
pared and. circulated
mittee.
HAS RETURNED FROM
VISIT TO TORONTO
|Board of Missions Had Very|
Successful Conference, Cen- |
tennial Minister Reports
Rev. J. P. Westman, pastor of!
Centennial Church has returned from}
Toronto and will be fii charge of both}
services on Sunday Mr. Westman!
was -in atténdance at the Board of}
Missions and reports. that they had
a very successful meeting The|
Methodist Board of Missions sed
its work, and Is now ready to enter
the united board. A pleasing. fea-
ture of the meeting was the state-
ment by the treasurer in which he
stated that when all cash and tegactes
were counted the former Methodist
Church closed its hooks. with prac
tivally $1,000,000 in ite hands. Derec|
the meetings several joint missiong
were held with the other’ unitihg
bodies.
Mr. Westman reached the city on
Thursday and’ will take charge of
both services in the Centennial
Church on Sunday In the morning
the subject will be, “Man vs. God,
and in the evening, “The Value of a
Fool.” The usual big sing will be
held before the evening service.
ST. JOH N’S SERVICES
‘Fhe Harvest Thanksgiving decora-
tions ‘in the chancel will remain as
they were fon the services on Sunday,
and the Rev. Mr. Hart, late head-
master of the Junior School, Rugby,
England, will conduct the services
for the day, the Rector, Rev.-F. A
P. Chadwick, being gway to preach
at the Harvest Thanksgiving Ser-
vices at Salt String Island
in
LECTURE ONE ON EVOLUTION
Willam H
Griffiths will deliver
a_ lecture on
“Evyohition. atvording to
Theosephy,'— before the - -Victarin
Theosophical Society independent
The deetens evetitg, at §& o'clock:
lec wilt. be tyen-in—_the,
roomem ae ‘Socle Tete, Tot
Rank Building.
Questions and discussion will tonsve|
the lecture,
'
| sermon
Terr} =
Thanksgiving at
St: Paul’s Garrison
Charch at Esquimalt
—
‘Thankagiving services. willbe held
at St. Paul's Garrison Church at)
Esquimalt to-morrow, commencing
with the 8 am. ‘Eucharist. Special
music has been arranged for
10.30 Matins and Eucharist, also
the evéning service at 7 p.m.
The Rev. H. VY. Archbold, rural
dean, will preach in thé morning and
Rev. Herbert’ Pearson, rector of Col-
wood, will preach at the evening
service. c
Fruit, vegetabies and flower offer-
ings wilt be given to the needy.
os cal — 25° mes ees 0a se Say
The Victoria Gritish Israel Asso-
elation. .will meet in, the Victoria
‘Club room, Campbeli: Bullétagy
uesday evening at & o'clock. * Mrs.
G, BE. Altree Coley will deliver an
adress. “Her subject wilt. be “The
Untgue Character of the British Em-
_ANGLICAN:
Bireet ’
te atm, Moraton
Sunday. Bohool, *.39
The Kev. Mr. Hort of
preacher
“Quadra
Oeemisien
2.29 p.m.
Evedeong
School
_hev _F,
(ueist < HU RCM CATHEDRAL— Hoty
Communi , om and /3.00 a.m
Matins apd sermon, tt a.m, preacher
Rev. A. E. de i. Nenns: Bvensot« and
7 pm... preacher/ Rt. Rev. ¢
Bishop of Cofurmbia; Sun-
fay Schoq! (in Memorial / Hall Senior
Plksses, 9.45 am Junior “lasses. 1) a.m
Very Rev... 8. -Quainton, BD.
rector
Scho
PAUL'S ROYAL
AND GARKT®
Elghteent!
Matios
H
Hoad. Hat
Haly Com
n, 33
S*. BARNABAS cut
$a +3 ong 3
ne bet
ge ebtetHEROH Aid — Sak
Kvdesone s
120 pm,
TMMANT
4 Fe
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
@IRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. act
amd nhdene. opel
races cave cH « (iaT, SCIEN-
TInT— Ser os. B
tue \e<ane
Death Real?”
“Read Root
Cer Baild
except Sundays
LUTHERAN
Sungay & .
OAKLANDS GOSPEL HALL
LAN] SOSPEL HALI H
“ide
PRESBYTERIAN
St. Andrew’s
Presbyterian Church
Cor. Douglas and Broughton Streets
Rew. W. Lesile Clay, D.0., Minister
Sabbath School
7 g Service; sermon
“THE CHURCH'S: CRY AND GOD'S
ANSWER”
Not Afraid
Bertrand Brown
W, (Trevett
Byes of All
Solo—“Be
Mr. A
Anthem The
On , Thee
7.30—Evening Service
“HOLDING ON”
“Lead Thou Me On”
Mrs. Jesse Longfield
The Fruits of*
Walt
Clare
sermon
Solo- Ellis
Anthem
Work
Thy
Clare
A very hearty and cordial welcome
s extended to all to conte and join
in these services
St PAUL'S Menry Street,
‘ West. Minister, Kev. J Patterson
Morning worship. 1 oe x Sunday
Behoel. 2.29 p.m.> eventos worship, 7.20
o'clock; song service at LU pm
ae MOS, 2025 Btanley Avenue
4 Strvic . 1. am and
MA. D Ds,
FORGE, Tilileum Road. Sunday
Ls service. 11 o'clock. the Pastor
Prayer meeting Tuedday
clock A welcome to all
Walker, -paster
Read
o'clock,
meeting.
Come and
Victorta
= Sabbath
7.209 pm. Rev.
Miniater.
morn-
Sunday eve-
the pastor
Thursday
receive
Rev
E
ning service,
el preach, Prayer
everma * o'clock
blessing for body, soul and apirit
Daniel Walker, pastor, 00
ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
UNDAY Service, § p.m, 229 Pemberton
Building.
SOCIETY OF. FRIENOS
oO IBTY. ‘OF FRIENDS 1829 Fe
Street. off Fort. Meeting for wor-
shi, 11 a.m.; Svening meeting, 7.30. .
SPIRITUAL
JPins? sPinirvaL cHURCH
Street Service, «7.90
Trance Address” All weicome
THEOSOPHY x
V ICTORIA THEROSOPHICAL
Independent, 161
Sunday, § p.m... lecture by
Srirfit he, “Rvotution
phy" All welcome,
UNITARIAN
tC NITARIAN CHURCH i. corn
wood and Balmoral Rae
service onty,
hing ‘ited
124 Fort
pm. "A
Unies Bank Butid-
Wiitlani
According to
of Ve
Mornine
cordially
mise Elis ANEOUS
antard nn
"7 t"" “OPEN FORUM, Harmony: Hall,
e Street at & pm. Subject
11 ecleck. Public
Dive
the |
for!
STATION |
SOCIETY,
° weteres Questions and discus- |
Leicn invited. Everybody weicome,
(incorporated)
CLEM DAVIES, D.D., Pastor
SUNDAY, OCTOBER
SAS am:-8echoo!
G. A. A.
W
of Religious Education
Hebden, Director
ii am,
“Second Coming”
“The General |
Election”
Members Seats Reserved Only ‘Till T
Next Sunday Night
Temple Choir and Orchestra
Dr. Davies Preaches
“Where Religion ‘Cheers”
CHURCH OF ENGLAND Rer=a. de B
11 am. and 7 pm., the Rector
Olympian Bible Class Meets at 10 a-m.
hOOs.. tour. ob\id atiend Sunday..oheoit. fmol, why mot?
class for then here every Sufiday at 2.30
ady Class hour with next Sunday's lesson.
Teachers and Young People's : hetLln pp specially
3.45. © K. Alger, loader
Rector, Owen
There is a
Bible &
§ One
School
Sunday puvited,
935 Pandora
Avenue
NEW THOUGHT TEMPLE
ARTHUR F. BARTON Will speak at both services.
ll am.—“BREAKING THE BARS OF FATE”
420 pam “THE GREATEST THING IN THE WORLD”
Wednesday Meeting at § pm. Subject
“BUILDING YOURSELF SCIENTIFICALLY”
Sunday School Meets at Noon
All Are Welcome Freewill Offering
Harmony Hall
724 Fort Street
to 9
Subjept:
CLASSES IN DIVINE SCIENCE
Dally, 3 to 4—Tuesday and Friday Evenings,, 8
Open Lecture, Wednesday, Oct. 14, at 3 o'clock
“HOW TO BLESS FOR SUPPLY”
Rhythm-class and Heal with, music
it wetcome
daily, except Saturday and Sunday
c anne it, Métaphysictan
ence, every afternoon at
Reading Room open from
Mrs LB
Love Offerring Att Wetcome
Evening Service
~ Sr Tuesday, 3 0
7.3 Rest and Heal-
ing Hour
Speaker
Mr. Thursday, § p.m.
Study Class
Macrae Unity Centre
Leader—Mrs, Gordon Grant
690 Campbell Bullding
Children's Service, 11 a.m
Reading Room open 10 am. to § pm
Noon Prosperity Silence every day
except Saturday
“THE
PLANES
Office Hours
we 2 to 4
LIVE ON”
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Corner Yates and Quadra Streets
Rev. J. KR. Turnbull will preach
ll am.—"THE FRIEND OF, GOD”
7.30 p.m.—"“FOUR KISSES”
Sunday Schoot; 2.30 p.m
Old Variety Theatre
Government Street, Victoria
Revival Campaign
CONTINUES ;
Evangelist W. E. Booth-Clibborn
(Grandson of the late General William Booth)
SUNDAY SERVICES
It am., “A String of Pearls”
3 pam., “Is God the Unjust
Judge?”
7.30 p.m., “The ee Tribu-
7.20 p.m.—"Sitting. on the Wrong Chair.”
; TUESDAY —
7.30 p.m.—“As It Waa in the Days of Neal”
WEDNESDAY
3.00 p.m.—Mrs, Booth-CJibborn Will Speak,
7.39 pan. Great Divine Heating Night:
. THURSDAY
7.30 p.m. —“The Day of Stimulation.”
FRIDAY
7.30 p.m—"“A Visit to Heaven.” °
+ 4 SATURDAY
Erangai 3.00 p.n.—Great Children’s Service.
“The Little Boy That Ruled the World.”.
-Ghibborn 7.30 p.m—GREAT SEEKERS’ MEETING.
NEXT-WEEK- no
Monday, 7 30
p.m.
Your
Last
Chance
ee
“NEW ARRIVALS! |
THE BEST BRITISH SHOES
K’s_K’s—K’s
For Ladies yas canacearaonl View ‘Windows
MAYNARD’S SHOE STORE
Phone 1232
WHERE MOST PEOPLE TRADE
Why Pay High Rates for Fire and Auto Insurance?
See the Independent Agency and Save Money Fi
The Natidnale, Paris, Established 1820
Provincial Limited, Engiand, Established 190%
The Cornhill Limited, England, Established 1%
Northwestern. National, Established 1369
- Natienal-Ben Franklin; Pittsburg, Est 1996
The Fire insurance Company of Canada, Est4
‘JOHNSTON & €O., General Agents
Phone 1032. . 615 Johnson. Street, Vistoria, B.C... Established. 1903
“Assets $27,402,000
Assets $ 2,400,000
Assets 11, 600
~ Assets. § 5,400,00
Assets $ 903,165
McClary
Ranges
$10Downand$10perMonth
Your Ol4 Range taken pa
payment
Canada Pride Range Cé.
Tree Preeti Street Perene -4bbe
Repeir-parts for-all-MeClary Ranges
Radio Fans Ask for Burgess Batteries
Because They Are the Best We Carry a Fult Stock
MURPHY ELECTRIC COMPANY
722 YATES STREET PHONE 120
Bay
Oak Bay. Move on;
Yarwood to Head New
Pemberton Dept.
auction in t
bottom of
The realty
ark t
and since ¢
upin-p
demand
’ People
und to
been walling tc
+, ROK
e there
aiting ar
od, at they
has been taken he | With the hat, the Coma
’ } crowing er day by day
of Pemberton “So important has that residentt
the
Cc. B have
Bay
«rganization
and ‘placed at
Oak
which
,Nountement
made tc
Mr. Ya
Sec cM FONE (SUES
Yarw
; result
reaity
keen
rel...
firm
of
at
SPUN SILK
“de sired
wide width,
coming
colors
While
95c
LEEDYE& CO.
DIRECT IMPORTERS
715 View St.
Im au
Ie
and. shacte -
it per
yard
those
pri
responsit
lasts
Canadian
Phune 134
| DRY FIR WOOD},
Large size in inch length
89.00 Per Cord
Cameron Wood and Coal
Co. Ltd.
Moody Bik, Cor. Yates and Broad
Phone 5000 for Better Wood
LONG distance mov-
ing’ is a specialty |
with us. Speedy, com-
modions motor \cne
that will, accommodate’
a big toad, reasonable
charges and & real wilt
ingness to serve the
publie,
PRODUCERS ROCK
& GRAVEL CO. LTD.
Sand anid Gravel
For all nd wasneg
a oemith fresh water.
Largest Capacity tr Cansda
1902 Store Street Phone 304,
GOOD FIR WOOD
= 00 Per Cord toad
LEMON GONNASON CO., LIMITED
Prone 77 2324 Gover ment St.
ELECTION MANIFESTO 3
Brush, obstructing clear ‘view: at}
cross- -rodds in Saanich will be cut
forthwith, the Saanich: Council last
might authorizing a campaign of tm-
provement in all, wards,
At the fortnightly luncheon of the
PRUE Cran tr be het or Mender
at 1 p.m. in.the private dining-room j
! of David Spencer Limited, Mise Bast-
man will be the speaker.
The Saanich Council tast night
congratulated the organizera of the
} Saanich display at New Wéstminster
Exhibition, which
in. competition with
agricultural districts
fhe six best
A meeting of the Triangle Club of
the Y.M. C. A... will be held oh Tues
vening The members will sit
) supper at 6.15 o'clock. Rev
ifellow will, give an. illus-
ure. .on Venice.
The regular monthly meeting of
the Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Y.M.C.A
Will be held on Tuesday;
at . k, Room L, YMCA
Bullding. Assoclate*members are in-
Yited to. attend. /
The Saanich Councit tast night}
_passed a vote of “condolénce with
Eoads Superintendent G. G. Girling
Lon the-ceath- of -hise-son,Johr Girling,
in-aneter eoHisien’ on Thursday
evening. .
The Oak Bay
} bali Club were the hosts oe 7 BOK iat
gathering in St. Mary's Hall, -Qak
| Bay, last nigtit, where an evenii¢g oF
danc ttracted numerous members
younger set from’ 9 tll 12
eaton's dance orchestra attended
“Oale” Ru
Peo:
a me
o'clock, 1
meémbera, an
past
or.
John Haikkila was fined $5u, with |
! t of t ad jal r
Seven new fox farms wi! shortly
pret “SS eREem in Sct Teenie:
r onunell last night granting per
r ranches in 4 ria of 1)
After
are
sed
ded parts pt
The B.C. Philatelic Society will hold
ts second at A ‘
secretay
Avenue
sTse
Roads improvement in Saanich has|
Lepertm
i oT,
ended being
wa sf
W Tw
the t
ev. Gordon Tanner,
wd
successor to
as gecretary of the Ar
Boys’
Naval Brigade Bend
handmaster
While crossing the itftersection of |
eut his
t called
fed Smith
1, home
OBITUARY
ral
who
of Samuet
was accident
aft
Tuesday
TI
| place ar
} last tay noor
rnobr
Lo'clock
Chapel Rev
late and the rt
lrest In the Royal Oak Burtal
The lal Mi Girling was
Woolwich, Engiind, thirty
and is suryived by his
Girling of Ratph Street, three t
thers and ,fhree sisters and a out
of frienda whb regret to learn of his
untimely death
Park
bern tn
years ago!
ather, G. G
aft#riioon the members
Leaf, A.O.F and
spe a Very pleasant
at > home of Mrs
Prior Street, about thirty
being present Dainty refreshments
Were served by the hostess, and fu
sure Blans were made for their com-
Ing bazaar on Novyemtwr t¢ Ar invi
tation wae se extend by M¥s
Fenerty, 1784°Denman St to meet
at her hom® on Tuesday evening, Oc-
tober 15 - 5
On Tueeday
of Court, Maple
their friends
fternoon
teh
October 13}
Several ps ners |
Sar
éPather. GO Sullivan.
Leaders of Law Society of
B.C. Consider Trial of Yama-
_moto For: Murder
| Find” “no Wrong in’ Prose-
; cuter’s Action Regarding
Sanity of Prisoner
won second award;
Vancouver, Oot, et, 10.—The Bepatinns
of the Law Society of British Colum-
| bia to-day investigated a complaint
against A. M. Johnson, K.C., of the
“Attorney - Goneral’s, Department,
lodged following reports on an ir-
| regularity int conduct of the
| Yamamoto murder’ trial in Nanaimo
| last Spring, and completely exoner-
| ated Mr. Johnson,
The Benchers- met in, the court-
| house, heard the evidence of Dr. H.
©. Steeves and Mr. Johnson as to
when the evidence of insanity was
|} put before the crown counsel, and
after listening to Mr. Johnson's ex-
planation of the course he had: fol-
owe 4, decided no action apainst tiie
uld be taken
it wae fullmeerting ofthe Bench:
era, with Attorney-General Manson
pin. attendance.
MIKE PREPARATIONS
FOR ANNUAL BALL
Committees “Appointed fo do}
Duty at Police Ball Nov. 6
j
|
ia |
n|
od
5}
mn preparing for and in arrang-
ti-potice balt;to be-hel@
11 -the-Armrories, Bay}
were
he anne
have heen named and
is morning from pe
a! the police ball
tentious |
ill enjoy
ced
dag!
goo Pre: cemrrtttees-ctrreerr trea tete +
orge Jay
R HW
togers.¢M
anom
omntttae
a ngham
“ga ste | MAEDA BOM
CHOSEN SEGRE TAR
Dr. W. J. ‘Sipprell Appointed
While in Toronto; Makes |
Important Announcements
ere was
ard
att
Mot a
eneral
Method
sint ime
* former
ap
May
tel “s al on
the Rev KX J. Brace
FROGS. one me general cecretary
of the t YMCA in
in B.C
n the pr
nd financial ad
1. Rev. Br
tal Y.MLC
w
era
of
ce by
lds Dr
nm his errival
stand awe
wrat
rk of ther ing can
lr
sim
ng
er before
ontinue
case
Dr, Sippreit
It ts expected
| moderator of. th hurch
Canada; Rev, Dr asurer of |
the formér Presbyterian Church, and
Capt. A J, Brace, F:RoG.S; wil ad
dre a mass meeting in Victoria on|
| On r 30, Dr. Sipprel!l announces
|
|PEPALL HEARING
SOON IN Tonegte
fal of i-|
nh charges on con
Ontario bond trans-}
pre pre
tobe
Oct, 10.-2Tr
Pepall «
1 with the
andal might ceed
‘ssions now
. AD
ratte 1 was granted by the judge y
| terday.
} Judge
marks to
Coaf#®worth confined his re-
expression of opinion rather
j than tc He said he had
| no dowbt the irt of general ses
| had—all_the facilities. and qualift
tions for trying the Pepall case, “and
eo fara it tein my power} will di.
rect the Grown to have a bill of in-
dictment brought before that court.’
Pepall's case was to have come be
fore the. general asstzes commencing
next werk
4 cour
HOLY NAME RALLY :
The Holy Name men of Victoria
wil) bavethelr_annua) rally at St.
Andrews Catholic Cattredrat on Sun-
day night at 7.29. The-#pecial—eer-
mon on this oceasion will be preached
thy thé well-known ~Redemptorist,
meee.
‘Dr. E. C.
I
cuniabtebas which will fune-|
tended by
sbsmp will be No, 632.
St
CAUSED FATAL cSt LA
Coroner’s Jury ury Finds: Ss *
(John) Girling Death i
Saanich Accidental
Samuel (John) Mills Girling, who
died- on-Thursday evening. in “St.
Joseph's. Hospital, ve howrs after
hie motorcycle collided With a motor
car on Carey Road, Saanich, came by
his death as a result of accident. No
blame attaches to Leonard F. Solly,
driver of the automobile, a coroner's
jury decided yesterday afternoon at
the Sands Funéral Parlors. Coroner
Hart directed the inquiry.
The jury added a rider directing
the attention of the Saanich Council
te brush growths at thé junction of
Carey and Harriet Roads, declared to
imperil! Traffic by limitttg viston—
Mr. Solf> stated that he was driv-
ing at a normal pace, towards the
sity, off Carey Road, at about 6.19
‘o'clock on Thursday, -daylight ,still
prevailing. Without warning the de-
‘
creased debouched' at a good speed
from Harriet Road, apparently hav-
ing tis head bent over his handie-
bars
At this polnt Harriet Road fs
Ajvided into two narrow tralia by a
tanga Of bush in the mitdie of the
roadway.
Mr.. Solly’s car. was_ hit by thé
motorcy near the rear mudguard.
The witness promptly went to the
aid of the infured- man, finding him
; ying underneath the motorcycle and
eomplaining of pains in, the head
Hor race Patton, a neaby' resident,
fave assistance, and aided in trans
ferriing the deceased to St. Joseph's
Dr. Howard Miller tes
fi that death followed frac ture
base « skull. cr
.
he
it
Tange
} Care
that
to fee
Oarey
struct
FUNERAL TUESDAY
¢ Phe decenecd wae
Saanich, where the
aided since 191 !
Fine na
the
Road
“heeau
we
very pom
tar-fn
farnity hae
tT ‘ wich
i have attained?
he wo
Street
rting
8
hie father, George
Superintendent for
~ HABEAS GORPUS MOVE: ssa" ss
‘Application to be Argued iy
| Vancouver Before Chief Jus- };
tice Hunter Cows 14
Vance
slau
paiec
fixed Cetat
ed gainst D ik *
trom thatthe trial budge timc mis
and Alberta +
peal
Civil PROCEEDINGS
of the con
4. before a court
which is hot competent to hear
unadian criminal appeals, there be,
ing no criminal appeal béyond
Supreme Court in Ottawa
WILL GONGECRATE
tian wauid be
QYAL OAK PLOT!
Bishop of - Columbia to Dedi-
cate Anglican Burial Ground
Sunday
The Lord Bishop of Cpelumbia at-
local clergy, and. a
choir frem the cathedral, will,
motrow afternnoon, Oct 11
o'elock consecrate that 1
Royal Oak Cemetery _ ret
chased by the Anglican C
the burial of her members.
are interested—are -inyited
en to join in -the . service
Psaalms to be sung in the proce
will be. the 28rd@-and 103rd, -ant
te-
ober at
;
pur
ch
the}
|
small
‘
rtion of the
for
Alu who
te-nttend
The
sion
Ure
RACKED T
IR-AT-EAS
n | Terrifying Creaturés of Queen’
Charlotte Islands Found to |
Be Huge Eels
Indians Solve | Mystery, Tell- |
ing Whites of Creatures
Forty Feet Long
The age- jons sea-s sea-eerpent mystery |
appeared to have uncoiled itself to-1
day when John ‘P. Babcock, Deputy !
Commissioner of Fisheries, was no- |
tified that Queen Charlotte Island |
Indians had identified the notorious |
sea serpents of their neighborhood |
+
)
|
’
+28 huge sels which live therein large]
numbers ,
John J. Van Valkenburg. who has |
been investigating the sea _eerpent
story ai! Simmer: aad who claims t
tive seen one of those
creatures, Is, responsible for tracing |
the monsters to thele dénc “Tron
ancient Tidians living In the Queen
Charlotte Islands he has learned that
for many-yrare the NATIVES Nave been
accustomed to catch astoundingly
large ecia at rare intervats “Tress?
eels, the Indians say, lve in a dark
slimy cave at the northern part of!
the Islands. Here—many years xgo
an Indian brave, aided by six logs,
did battle with one “of the monsters
and killed it after a fierce fight. The |
eel killed In this encounter was near
ly forty feet long. }
The Indians" description of the ee!
says" Mr. Van Vatkenbure ‘
precisely with the appearance of 18
reature-whicty he saw swt
his h few we
lar
uth
sharp
interesting
trange
ming new
“They have a
Satrile and
very...}
am%
i, Van Valkenture
that he. wtit shy
the h ee)s le
helr cave and Kill cue tf-he-ean- thee
solving the—sen-serpent mv for
all time
CAPT, HOSKEN BACK |
ON RUSSIA'S: BRIDGE:
FOR EASTBOUND TAP
ome
very
the m
ne
eks ago.
annot
yn t e of the
stery
te
be heavy ac-
cording to ft en } out on Fri
day “by
sures
Canadian
«i
Pact
the Ss. Empress of Russia, due
sail next Thursday More than
saioen paasengers are already booked
with. —tull complemegs:—e«t—ee
lass fares s fairly heavy
ass and 150 steerage
wards of 400 names
Capt. A. H
back f
sk
RNR,
wh
s leaves w
eler
with ?
returning
W. RC Moree
wife
t ; hang:
The
duétec : at the
at mornihg evening. |
jem Davies's theme in the morn
will be “The Second Coming of
Anthem by the oh
| Taste and. See” by Goss, Ir
w. Dr, Davia will speak on
i ¢ EPlcet The ch
d tion ir. Fred
will render “Jesu Thow
ch Far From Th
y dford, and “Ave
Mc t. Fhe morning service
commence am, the evening!
service at 7.3 |
torla The
Dr, ¢
| ine
Christ
Versum,”
|. —
Government Change |
Would Hit BC., |
Vancouver,: Oct, 10 ‘Tl have been
{ix the fight for abolition ef unfair}
railway freight rates in British Co.
} lumbis a for over-twenty years,” R, r.
MeLennan, Fed
ji" Borrand, dec
| Gressing ui large meeting in ~ the
PInnish Hatt “We fave at Teast
secured a fair measure of relief, but
it now appears eyen that is not se.
cure ad
‘The fight is not over yet. ne mat;
what anyone may say
“There ia onlf one thing for the
neople of Vancotver and of British
jumbia to do and that is to pup
cont the Government that is carnest
ly striving to-“give us fustice. Other
wise, wé may lose what we have got
feom it. |\A change .of governnient
in Canada would be a _ Calamity” fpr | Roi
British Columbia.”
ter
iy-make an expedite}
Passen- j
tret
steamship |
officials on the list to be ¢ arried by |
160 |
ona}
third |
totalling a |
trom}
} Gratian
Says McLennan|
rul Liberal candidate ¢
red last night tn ad-|
‘Cordon
| 2980
ceives Stations Thousands
Miles Away Without Aerials or Wires
UPER - SENSITIVENESS. — super - selectivity .
—falthful repreduction—portability and no vn-
sightly wires or batteries. Theée are the ad-
vantages which have made the West use Super-
_Heterodyne the standard radio of th rid, Price,
on convenient térms, complete with 6-U-V-138 Radia-
“$190.00
Am
121 Wildwood Ave, Victoria; BC, Getober %,-1348!
The Red Cross Workshop, 584 Johnson Street, Victoria, B.C.:
Dear_Sirs>—I beg to enclose herewith cheque for $75.50, belng $72.
as agreed for the porch an 3.00 for the storm.door
i_slse_wish to tai.¥ou. how very pleased Lam with the ork I am,
pore than eatisted and shall Nave @reat pleasure in. recommending
The Red Cross Workshop” to my friends whenever opportunity arises,
Yours truly, MAY C. PEARSE.
THE REDmfaCROSS WORKSHOP
584-6 Johuson St.
(owt Below Government) Phone 2188
ww "Whe
Ue
Nice Coffee, Isn't It?
That ts made with an ELECTRIC
PERCOLATOR which com-
mences to percolate in sixty
* seconds from cold water, Con-
‘ nects to any lamp socket and
can be made on the table, right
at your elbow.
CALL AND SEE DISPLAY
"HAWKINS & HAYWARD
Electrical Quality and Service Store
1121 Douglas Street, Corner View Phones 643—2627
THE ARISTOCRACY OF SODA SERVICE
LIGHT LUNCHES, AFTERNOON TEAS
Seats for Four Hundred. Continuous
_ Corner Fort and Dou
Liee de eh © thee dete
= SALT LAKE CITY OVERNIGHT ‘ENTRIES
r and fur-} Sevent
| teenth
199 | Rilly G
104 E
a )
98
h race—One mile and ene-sim-
one-half
« :
aur
China Rose
Mi Amigo
amp .
baon
ght eae
) Christie Molstera ...
ape Leat
FRESHMEN THAN
TABLES ON SEMIOR
and one-half
| _The Sophomores of the Victoria
‘| College planned a teception for the
Grath : PSS 108 | stitution: and freshettes of that tn-
Marvel
Canvas Hack
c - Led
4 Hope
Dare
Bierman
Recruit
Horinga
Waidout +e
Als’ Pas ‘
Etta D>
T. J., Pendergast »
Fourth race—Six furionge
Lady Be pron
Keala
Mise Fryer
ol Blue
Sweet and Low
ombustion ,
Clarkson ..-.
Al. Hotfoot
Ot }as a part of the annual initiation pro-
| cess.
The Frosh, however, planned a little
| surprise of thelr own, J/asembling
. 109; before the rites of the solemn
- 104/iniUation ceremony began,
116 | rushed the college bulldings tn com-
bined attack, laid seige to what
k, who took shelter in the common |
room, and eventually. humbled thete
initiators,
The reception, at which ever 200 |
persons gathered, cata many
ouge 5 :
Fifth raee—Pive and
longs.
Lester
Pud
| Recover
Runolathe
MEN OF COLLEGE
stitution at Craigdarroch last night
'
Lif | They Gk not capture tn the first at *"
t
iweeeeeeeeeve
they 5
VICTORIA. DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER. 10,1925
ee aT aa Ie = iH sty Tak me WO oe ee
Eskimos Will Not Pass ori rca iv -Cutting: Figure With- Washington | Plies la Halt Of Pi rates Defen SIV
x ad es . . . .- , © € ° . > .
a : a =
Out of Western League | Fame in Baseball Work Much Superior
ean Cesarewitch. Stakes Will be}. Pe) =. = 0 oS Acc Final Batting Averages Show! ; 5
President Richardson Announces Schedule Will Bé Run Wednesday; Cambridge- cs eo : ‘+ | He Has Equalled Record of | One of Interesting Fe
Drafted Néxt Week and Released for Publication Shire Stakes on October 28 bas ee eye So i Burkett and Cobb
in About Two Weeks; Saskatoon Will Also : peop a . bs > Mi ee rig fave Es ga =a ao
Remain With League, Making Six-team ~ |One Horse Seldom-Wins Both eee ete tog Homerun Honors and Total Artillery Keeps Boomiig; Bleuge Reeov-
Cirenit;. Frank, Frederickson . Takes Races; Big Prices Will-be norte _ ~ Bases Also Fall to Him; crs From His Injury; Rest Yester-
Fling at—Regina Sports Scribes Paid Lucky Ones ' ere Ba ee ‘ Simmons-Stands Out. day Was Welcomed
atures of Werld’s Series Has Been
‘Superb Work of Youngstérs in, Pittsburg Infield;
Honierun Record Will Be Shattered if Heayy
@
(Special to The Times) London, “Bng., Oct. —Publie_tn-} Chicagy, Oct, 10.—Rogers Hornsby,
: . terest is centred on the popular} pllut-of fhe St. Loute @axdinala, toc t- ‘Washington, Oct. 10. Lightning calvulators figure that yester-
Calgary, Oct. 10.-Edmonton Eskimos will take their ‘usual| Autumn “double” that wil virtually iat. vay takes His place in the baseball | Cay 8 postponement adds about $1,000,000: fo the world’s series
place on the Westert™hockey cirenit this. coming Winter. This| hae PEE er _ so Sanaa K eR i YEAS pers of Kame as one giant bill. This includes increased hotel and maintenance costs to the
statement, -made-yesterday by E.-L. Richardson, president: of the | Cesartwitch stakes ts to be run next es eas : : bm - 5 years, finished Bare we ith a bat. |/7Howers and contenders, added expense to the clubs and the wide
league, dispels all doubt that has prevailed as to the POSSibilit¥ Yryaresmire’ Gatober 14 a08 ee oe att beeves won han ees SEC. NES ting wrerage-ahove-.400,——— ~~ -vartety-of revenue that is connected ofherwise with such # travel
6f the Alberta club dropping from the race. The league will in-} ture “headquarters, These two are a a bs Mibain t Bho stqtet lew A pay oes aot sem LBS performance. : ;
clude Edmonton, Saskatoon, Victoria, Portland, Vancouver aud emcee ettey pene penent. a ee < - ; iii} ATTEN | esse. Burkett. famous member ofthe The Pirates were greeted this morning by President and Mrs,
Calgary. : Racing continues. until the end ott Seong my tRNA SSA Wii lold, Cleveland ~Nattonais-and—T9- Coolidge-at the White House and -posed for pictures with the chief
| Cobbs. age f the . Ti a
com 2.5% sal si ry ne are wo or] 1! i’ eee : ; 7 “xec ‘ I j
There was never any doubt on our part about the Eskimos, | November, but shave are enly. rd a : ae | HN i Hornsby in #922 batted 40% Last | ¢xecutive and his. wife; who arranged to attend the game jin the
remarked the president.““fhe make-up of the league is set for the \the Cambridgeshire has— been de- Ma : . 3 HH season he established a modern high | afternoon,
“ " : Sa ks 4 ee | record of .423) In 1923. although |
season, and we shall.proceed with the drawing of the schedule cided A | 3 : pg aa te champion of the National League, he | | Most of the rival players yesterday
_——————_ TT . « om y - Pa * 4 - - Selzer > oppor ‘ ig
next week. Yt will probably be an Kh. James A. de Rathschilee Teen : ¢ og } hit only 384. This ls Hornsby’s sixth ized (he opportunity to get abit of
‘eld. Vionnet by: Lorenze-Viorne,- and ¥
* s | diversion and take thei inds off th
other. week from that time before the f i > x | consecutive yearsaacchampion of the | 2 heir minds the
athedule Will be ready for release.” John Bo Elected }sare Ro Ry or year-old -Mande- | ee - é , y ‘ | i NationatLeague hitters, having first Fords (aerattle a woe: OF sheen
Sgr | Florence, are outstand itestants | ; 5 . ; ii HN HAH led the league in 1920 with .370 javent’ to Laurel, Md. to watch the
orence, anding. contestants | 7 r ¥ j en horse races while others attended
With the assurance that Edmonton . bin the Ces: H.’- Vionnet waa | ” Nias ie | | Burkett’ made his marks tn 1899, e 0 e j theatres ‘
Will be in the race once again every ¥r f r e sixth in rm t year. They art . . . 96 and 1899. Cobb led his leagutins— .
thing is cleared for the Western ex 0 iH nsi | ly | 3 H ot f v |
not by any means heavily weighted | | y with a mark above th . tone to a thousand hopeful fans
Hockey League rioguls to proceed] * Vionnet being set tocar 3 pounds | iH i wbabove thiafigure in Washington Park oe ea r umbrellas, papersso# -
with final preparations’ for the open | lu and Mandelieu 110 The offk iat} ) f | ue ot Jeading_the-leaguc H hei = = te nantes covering in the
ing of the season. Saskatoon is to} wn iW Ing hartdicapper allotted top Welght of | - | | | } . i — | centre feld preachers In the “rata for
stay in. the league this Winter and | Tze por s, to both Somervillt Tat . | i]
. |
tersall’s four-year Huratwood, by Gay
tH addition to capturing the 1925
a, batting averages honors, -Herneby . — chai noure before the post
provide : Theron | aceording to the unoffic a : sg} ponement decision was reached
this wit! provide six*clubs. Thevonty Ht } i Pe . ain the final. unofft tal es Players Will Ha ve to Hit mat of them. } sth ol in itr )
difference to last years leop will be} . Crusader-Bleasdale, and Jas, White's Ht Han mi I | ures. -ta-—the ofthe ts, ; | hee r ‘ 1
the fact that Regina players will ve | Successful Year Experienced | four-year-ok loudbank, by Nim-/| ¥ HN majors with thirty-nine homers. He Farther Than Pittsburg to puney pig ts be are of het
dolled up in Portland uniforms . bus—Berengere Cloudbank ~ also had the highest totel-base mark ' s, Ay 1ey planned to be back
For a MHiie TO WES HGR RHO tert whe By Club; Reports.-Received, | given.anoxti..ten. pounds to Carry : 6AM RICE ey of 380. Me made 20% hits, which, be- | Round Bases | in line again to-day
ther or not Kenny MecKenzle would . ' as the result. of h vietory in the! - RTS OHI Hones neat torts Ty = |. While. the fina. tout. inthe
Keep his cul going —tn-Bamonton-} Officers Elected Prince Edward Handicap early at : Wine ‘tadueat Wak’ & 4: . ; doubles and ten triples } aaueted pgowapess waiting for the official
When he sold Joe Simpso Roy | 48 | mont) | Sam Rice ' Man ¢ ar pecause of his. exceptional apecte z ea” or “? from Commissioner
Rickey ana FONNEY Mbcerhasert0 aoe en A GRUELLING TEST He's fast, w hard hitter and-onexot the “best outfielders in the game CUYLER BEST RUN-GETTER Landis, a battalion of ushers under
i
York it ‘began to lock a@ though he | Other lores a Sam hax been with Washington since 1915, in fact, has never played Hazen Cuyler, Pittsburg, outfleldes Stanley Harris Only Man Who} tie protection of: the grandstand
Burnside Lawn Bowling Club held | outstanding ;
lencateal The . P with an - or Teague te he wet Kan tt , 7; who ga hig team mate, Max Carey, | ie | gang “How Dry I Am,” to which the
was through. Then it was an- its third annual meeting last evening, | Mtrles have to be consi l : wit nott major league team. He ta th econd beat hitter in the : tine inn chane Sow Has Not Hit:- Traynor Only | bleacherites. responded with “It Ain't
founced that he had traded Bob There was a‘good attendance Re ing for a Cesarewitch wint are J series this year ‘ y | .
Trapp and Joe McCormi k to Port
¥ ’ re ra. pro he’ b ecorer in the : Gonna Rain No M
conte of the past season's work and | Shepherd's Winalot, Som Aa oe aa: Cant Man Not to Strike Out |
‘nd for Art Gagne and Bud Shore.| Pio were eeented and proved ex-(teranita’ Baton Rouge : mted 144 times. Carey | PRICES RUN HIGH
Tie air, however, was not Cleared :
. ; . : fin A with forty-three stolen te
plionaify encouraging Confirmatign, Frank Curzon Ruth Sick Agai Jack Reddick S He| vases: the highest in the majors. | ies |-Teket acalpers were in abundant
gntil: yesterday, when President | Tne ‘ub is thos ig established | Sod the Aga-han ; < u tc gain |J AC é tc ays e|' ‘Other dine i‘ “ st arti i ting Washington, Oct. 10 Grififth }array at the Union station, along
iichardeonmate-hts-xtatement-Me-T— 7) the members propose to devowe | 2 eet-eht- Zambo : —-_- aes , - ee DAtiNg | stedium. scene of-the—next-—three} Pennsytranie Avenue and in the hotel
Kenzie will have Duke Keats and | tnoir efforts in future to the recem Aga Khan, who ?} chieves ypu Still Holds Title as! eras ify a 67: “Wheat, | clashes in the world’s series, offera | )obbless offering —partboards for-sale
Barney Stanley as the “brains” t6/ tion of the debentures issued in 1! tation for speed i J pon New York Oct. }0--Rabs Ruth ar + Hs a ES tn FITTED’ \. | somewhat moreof-a—test-for-thetit-{at double and ifiple the face value
help him m a team, Wor tre witt+ Appreciation «was expressed he Teo, wit rest a2 r par 2 L . h H e h ; y i i ey me, itt erty ters than dtd Forbes Field in Pitts-} Washington fandom seems ot be
have to do some tall hustling to get) soveral speakers of the work of the I g t eavyweig t ve De ee ular wT Cate bure. Temporary, stands in Pittaburg | king Ms base ball h k seri- ,
a-echib that will stand up 1 the j ; Wer, “Brooklyn, — 380; Cafes. | made the field a “bandbox Whit |iously than a year ago in the frst
rest inothe race. His goal position | wig pag filled the position of prem- | U7" . * { sp! ie Calgary, | 1G--Jack Reda CO ee dee ee nocech, | there Iara tringe-of cireus-seats-in-the | flush of pe ld’s_ series
Wilt cause him some worry. Last | jag officer in the club for the Past} acre tie n ‘ Twelve ler t it ¢ § ne light , tani Seat wight 3 : cies Oe ; Re Yor! lieft and centre fieldw in-the Wash. | (tumph.- The carnival atmos eof
year he signed Stuart rips Br AnGOM | three years hee he shh tb NB = + liom sae ete penta ao: ti) where We . pal ange ae P "330 lington Park, it will require a lustier last Fall was missing along the, bou
amateur mireert proxed an ay: The wor of the ladie#"hlub. also y ‘ \ i, WOES : 4 ly 3 lulacs te camels Chak | jevarids, where Bucky: Harris, Walter
outer 1d McKenzie sceurec , O- a mee large easure | “oy
fir to help him out He finally} “8") hue coe :
of 1 - . 4 ? ae 4 : ans ; . , ’ lack Coombs’e record of ,})Johnson and,their mates are taken
are Heh ec € ipion Au ve in the closing t fi ‘
: formerly | Praise during the meet ns oat Gia | Suzanne Wins Match pr He , | world's now ag matter-of-fact champto
ended up with Hec Fowler, formerty "
|
George Vallance: was again elected | a nada d the de-| days ofthe American League cam, series victories and no de-
jeorge Vallance age ;
home. run king ing
n New las from
retiring president James Henfrew
oft}
Sol Joel's
iT’LL SOON BE OUT The following officers were elected | otal.
As soon as the world’s baseball} for the ensuing ‘ } L ~ Si | G | ns
geries is finished- there will no doubt Honorary pres nny es yeur’s Derby, who was withdrawn at} osing ing 4 ame! p Op d S P s te in hia laat two! games, fin- |#@me. Babe Adame, Pirate veteran, jand comparative Anexperiens a waa
Me a flood of hockey “dope.” | The} Pauline, Agent-Gene ral for British) iho last moment from the Cesare one ain an now uts a ee ith a ean’ oft hom the same footing with] cxeected to make them unsteady, but
moruls-are busy getting their ffairs | Columbia; hon, vice-preside Rob- | wien that F | | McKechnie’s youngsters have out-
the ‘Tigers, heat..out.Tria__ Speaker, | and lost none
Fougth, with 124 pounds is Lord Cleveland, for-batting honors of the } °° # fall, forfeteahis chance
Derfiv's Sanse o, winner of taat
superior defensive work of the Pi-
rates ere the series, thelr youth
|
ol¥p } - presting phase
{ i ht , tefe ‘ " feats ie still safe Stanley Covele- One of the most interesting phases
aeovierorta, wetween the uprights { - and third in the ¢ of weights e ° } cision of Referee ¢ . a “home] paign rery Hetimann fielder of y a age rs ~ ——
Ht VICtIrA, werwe , secretary-treasurer with 127 and 12h p respectively n tenna it out }cown-offiotal." | | akie. who had won three f the serfes thus far has been the
Americ#n’ Leagie Hellmann made ddd was besten in the second
indicating is owner ts . Sy . ho t ! t | leskie, but it Is unlikely that he
a l_b arrela | ert Macnicol, Meeye of Saanich; pre-| concy > 6 <n H Ne ed ee H | | 393. Speaker, who had been out o , 1¢ | steadied their more seasoned oppon-
tor-nbebna gem distal shee. fr Mt a parrers ort as a _ ed; yiee-presi- nthe q m the ~ ater and shorter Ps 18 M o—Susann a t to tcago GAME? te tineup woring the Thal: days or} will see any service ents for the most’ part. This was
of news on the signing | By 4 . Bers vne, captains ¥. 1 Tact he Cambricgestiupe rench-teonis gham | race. going in only as>a_pinch rticularl » of the atonewall In-
“Rold-outs’” and new marvels Defore | dents r . Byng, ca HOWE - artieeretiestte w eel meet we ecaae ast . ee particularly true of the aton wall in
when she invaded Chicago, Oct. 10.—Rain and snow | ber PTEITRTre ~ with : ” tte ; ashy Ppp ce er Bo Teconte regia} Rete defence patie behind Aldridge
the batters only once before, when
former enemy territory for a series) prevents i the third game between the | 4) i91¢ ) }member of the Pirates who has not |in Thursday's tuesle
’ 16. he
a mile
furlong — race mes— of
that stand out in the
| HARRIS HAS NOT HIT
‘4 Huddlestone secretary -treasurer
ge — George Vallance; auditor, W. H.}
Fe Tupman. The following wert canis Nunburnholme's| of matches. She, defeated the Aus-| White Sox and’ Cubs tn tho - ofty inished with .356 struck. out at Jeast oncé, and Man- With. each club holding a victor)
Regina hag not recovered from the] to the committee: P. Handle
y th ndley. J. } Purpis| triah champion, "Frau Rediic} ° vlastiltties will: be resumed | SIMMONS SHOWS HIS CLASS ner Harti of the @anators. is the |to-daye game. will. be a: crucial
blow it received when Wesley Champ) Hibben, A Halt nec oor’ de Rees D . pa riae oward P y. Lord] cisively, 6-0, 6-0 to-« at.the National League park,; Simmons, Athletics star, made omy regular of the Washington team | peint, with its result likely to have a
gold bis. team to Portland, Champ! Goodwin, J. Renfrew A. A Ass, wc ry's ‘ ct ar J. Whit After the cheering had subsided, her permitting Sheriff Blake | three distinctive marks. In addition who has failed to make a hit marked Influence on the pitching
| "
1 Mile Lenglen declared Te .» Cubs and “Red” |Faber of the| to securing the most rons} he While the Senators ere outhitting | strategy afterward Should the
take javer the club. They wanted i) Moules FRENCH THREAT VANISHES | we have been at war with these fir : Box probably will he the| made 251 hits,’ which gave him the | the Pirates to date .254 tos.194, Pitts Pirates win, the dopesters, believe
all right, but they didn’t want to put
oy T A ple ietec ' rhe: , ase rh ‘ burg has a& perfect flelding average | Harris will call on his big ace, John-
. . " ole The Frenct vasio the | People selected highest total base mark of 391. y ‘ t « 8 Johi
up the money Re sult, Champ ~ ld } 1 Céssrewitch dans . “ + Se | | doubles, fourteen triples and twenty- | °% ainst -061 Yor Washington, due to] son, for the fourth game Sunday in
The sport writers-in gina t — as. e ague preg bie Ne of hi . . | four homers put him third among the Peckinpaugh's Maree errors an effort to tle
t it up again. Simliar-
nesailed professional hockey i acceptances |
» Cambri pahire
guve the fang there. every chance to 4 Vallance A. Stewart and
! ° ° . ” laying 100 or more - — ly, if -Pitteburg loses, McKechnia
comments” have provoked —@ recently, when It was made known regular hitters E af . ‘ Ty arabs L se eadows, h
ete Peadteaaen, ve el Aggured OF Strong | tases tetas et aks Pictorial. Golf Instruction || 2s2".2.s0"s2 Huge Crowd P cee Rey ep a
man of the, Cougars, who-t#-now In) | Withdrawn. Of the six left | ‘ Johnny Mostil of the White Sox | uge Ow ays
Winnipeg Freddie amt conn sie 8 | Prince won the event in 19 Laat | B H B M P was the leading base stealer with | . - F a
ctionary anc 1 rapt re y A . rs winner was he AgA Sann's ' | sofa J ~ '
ond on nt the following to the sporty Support This Year Chariey’s Mount who died recently. | ‘ y > . Martm forty. two, wile Rots Mousel of th Final Tribute To At the rate the heavy artilfery has
ing editor of The Winnipeg Free French competition for the Cam- | — pagan ae emer eg Sst ‘ |
|
: , ming id yeen going the record for home runs
tter th thirt ee tabe Ruth
Press bridgeshire is more serious with Le utter with thirty-thr -
in a single series will be pushed into
: | finished in a tie with Ken Williams the disrard In two game the bie
“In your ‘Down the Sport ‘trail’],,, , + eae +. 4 Capucin the highest of French-bred | kyin th Bal Barcel Bigs Bion ac le : Id | {B ball distard, In two games, the big
coi your ‘Down the Specie tom | Victoria and-District ASSOCia-) horses in the tabie of weights. En- | Skying the l of thé Browns for second place with, MMOL OF DASEDAM ) ic. havo. rattied “ove tive chroot
an editoriat in- The Regina Leader.) 4: : tace | tered — are Irismond, . Premontre, | Other leading batters —— pass " Hect "
Undoubtedly this will be very much tioh Calling For Entries; | Masked Marvel, and Condover” be- | eae Sh 1 The high mark is ten, collected by
|
}
acacia Ml Lryrodbatig lh arial rate Wanted Real Early sides ten of are pexedin the most Louis; .359:-Rice,Washington,. 349 Christy Matthewson Biirieds| “"* Yanks ad. Gianie in 1923. It fe
of amateuriem > pur | t he en
calise prominent trained” en | worthy of note that all five ' of -the
exélusion .ot- ~~ professionalism, — not } trants and winner of the Lincotn- Two Carloads of Flowers lhomers rapped out at Forbes Field
— landed in-temperary-sections 96 the
Sent From Out of Town = jovter stenes
SKYING THE. TEE SHOT Lamar, Philadelphia, .349; Sisler, St
} Louie, 846 Celings,. Clierage.
A FAULT SOMETIMES mbes; New York, .342; Hale, M
phia, .342; Barnes, Cleveland
|
Seat eth cis olan “fc GCInOL: paleal HARD To CORRECT 23%; Jacobson, St. Louls,- 838. |
knowing the reason for so doing shire, has, however, been with
any more tian thé man who follow Strong support is assured-for. the | drawn : ]
dre party in ‘politics because aor r seawen of the Victor and | FABULOUS PRICES -
futhe gran is woe ot Distet Basketball. League ma Bluege last night wak pronounced
pre ill the waveeba ad wil e*( ified. under the same|¢, those lucky enough to pice) the] C | od L di t etelits ver ™ lentirely out of danger of_any- if-
hered to tam potiticat precepts-| dtvisiong_as—last—year as follows: | Selene of both hearty ‘whist pine 0 wo a tes 0 > ney : ure.1 ae! < ~ = aati me leffacts of the blow that. struck fe
The article quest! n closes. in Ladies’. A and B, and men’s A B and | tutes the “double.” As for one horee| aed os. ao . im * ate ree | cown and cast an added bit of Rloom
melodramatic siipplicat C, The senior men’s. divison will afft- ; = ‘ anatomy iceh
.
a winning both events in the same C pet A | aa = Pearid ia ce over the Senator camp in; the. midst
gina: fans to give : a aM4- | late with the B.C.A.B.A. making them AES ON gle ame : om. e i naga forth to Win’undying fame on the | t
. 6 year, such a thing is almost unheard | baseball diamond, to-day claimed him of defeat An X-ray—of the third
deur hockeyists. the encotre eligible for B.C. championship. Under | ~ R bo I H di | ro aackee sad reveale 7
} . , though it-ise—abways bein 5 F “ te « So: | sacker’s head revealed no injury of
(Hirt they will n! vd thi ruling members. of other teams | teamed m Plaisa: mer aa 1% a w j ose Ww an tcap| Napa Bo ey se Beri ys any sort He was resting easily at
atfangers. The ates i ee will be able to play doth in CIty) both paces, however, while ‘Hackler’s DIPPING — heeompany the body to its last rest- | his apartment ih a hotel and physt-
ete ro! pant he a put League and Sunday School. League. } pridg on the Cambridgeshire ©. in Ladies of the Colwood Golf Club ing-nlace in the little cemetery on| clans who had earlier believed he
pint A rofessiona : ocke Righes Tast year valuable trophies were and Christmas Daisy RiGHT . have made arrangements for their | the tskirts of the town , could not don a uniform again until
they ao Dake MUR. Somes in| 4 for winners of. each divit- | | 1a 19 SHOULDER. < } l annual Rosebowl handicap competi It was here, asa student at .. | Sunday, decided he would be fit and
a bo Bon Endre be la cw arte T sarewilich, one of the most Ks tion The qualifying round over | nell University, that the basebal 4.) ready for service to-day. This was
38 net ig3 AB ore nt aules whl a coveted of the turf's trophies even OnE. CAUSE. + | eighteen holes will be played on Mon | of other years first ge ned fame as x| the most cheering development of
U eams ie Avisio rophics w | lay, October 12 \ | 7 ei BAG os on tis “4 s any . so 2
sAitor The te: t ti me. of the harde tk ‘ day, rie vitcher His body, atcompanied by | the day for the Capital camp, while
sporting editor of The Regina! again competed. for, and busketball “el Preah = ror in 1838 b shee wg a FoR SKIING The eight lowest scores will qualify hs sorrowing’ widow San brought |'the ‘veteran Ro«er Peckinpmush
Leader at that time, but Lwouid SUZ- | fans can count’ on a bumper season ae ee rie 7 . and the remainder will be formed | back Jast night ‘fr sar 8 ke, | wh » wobbly fieldi h t
‘ ‘ ind it. the & state-| or, 2 o~ ad heir to the Russian throne, and was ya ast nigh rom Saranac ake, | whose wobbly fielding had heen an-
geat that he find T ns which intend fo enter any @ into fights of eight where he died Wednesday night th ty t 7 t 8
nirs in Regina. before eins], I are usked to forwarl en-"| named after its founder a dr Where, he diet ednesday nigh other damaging factor in’ the Sen-
at affair Fae ee abby, Wwihals he leagues are usked to forws | Jt has been rim continvously since | Prizes will be given. for. the hest Ranked high with floral tributes, | ator's defense, also hailed the rest
Ee i ata te trom the City eta brag Ww a a then. The Cesarewitch is a handl- . ~ Tet medal in the’ qualifying round, }the body ty in-state at the home pf |as a chance to shake his fielding jinx
of Winnipeg to fr ~ under the guise | retary,-G—_msnes SS. exp of twenty-tive sovereigns each, bs sh a bes mo} ren Espa of the | his. mother-in-law; Mrs Exank and get back into normal galt.
‘ ont aie maa . ret and seconc gents Stoughton Crowds. began to gather
of amateurs, wh they were being WANDERERS MEETING with 1,000 sovereigns ndded and last] , The draw and ‘starting times. are - = ——s
paid for their. services . } 7 — f ; | year it had a veiue to the winner of ca peliowra: d sta 4 n are Sp et eee Rote oerry ee '
“Piametrically oppo this is The Wanderers Intermeria o Rig- | £2,016, z é 10.00—Mra. ‘Pocock vs. Mra. Parry eiare opened_until near the funeral So far as the twirling staffs ‘are .
the record of the. Py who tor by ¢ lub -will hold a meting i ihe = * 10.05-—-Mias V. Matson vs. Miss} hour, a steady stream of persons filed concerned, .'Harris and, McKeehnie
fificen year# have uphelt the honesty }¢ hathber of Commer-e roms ats} Ss COAST LEAGUE 1 Richards. } past his bier both regarded the delay as a benefit,
and integrity .of, professional hockey |-o'clock Tunyday evening, datoler 3, } Aha 10:10-——Mre:-Criddleve.—Mra, Hib. | “HONORED “BIG SIX” Although it did not change the plans
in’ the West. There have beon-many | tg choose © captain) and sikn oon At Portland— HE. berson . | THEY HONO 8 originally laid-dewn- by the rival
fnalnuations and accusations of | players. -AH ‘wanting t> play with Sacramento”. .7: 1% 6-6) 10:18-:Mre.- Lawson _ve-_Mra: Righ- | - Many baseball notables and prom- | hoards of strategy for the third game.
wanton commercialism such an isivhis team aré asked: to attend, Portland 4 ® ards. inent business eh —, great dis-|arier an afternoon of deep thinking
eharact#rizea by such unthinking 0 Na) ae shee « ~ 40.2 ase: tances to hongp “Big Six.” ‘ amona& the master minds, It was as-
voluble person ag the writer of oe oak les Ratteries—Hughes and Shea; lie 10.20—M¥s, Rasmussen va. Mrs Thousands ‘sent measages of con- we t e r m pis, 1
and sble 4 Fg Y 1 Tot Stevens sured ) that to-day’s tussle would
F 4 Leader article, but there have always been an amateur arrison anc ‘obin. x dolence from all parts of the world, | J u
The Regina t + theréfore want amateurs} . At Seattle— Hw. E 10.25—Mra. Crowe Va. Mra. Rich- find Alex. Ferguson, Washington's
has never heen any taint attached to | booster, and therefore wan a 4 a a 0 iii a a | Flowers sent from other cities filled | ight-b . a t
i keyasuchas has been | to do the right thing by themselvés | Sait Lake ........ | ardson, two baggage cars 3 veteran right-hander and master ©
professions aperey tng ee See | “| ind the -pudtie—atlerge, and wish} Senttte .... J 1:35=-Mres. Wilding vs. Mrs. Abell. In accordance with the wishes of the screw ball, opposed to” Ray
boy eras Ley, AE SS is Heartity-that —~amateur—-hockey —tr}— Pwtteries—Muicely gale, “ - ita i , 1.49—Mrs.--Schwengers ve. Mrs. i Nin tthewson ihe PneFET sof | Kremer,.a comparative newcomer to
Meenas. I think that it is time that | Regina and elswhere will be fostered, | Miljus and E, Baldwin. & ee ; a tase TR She Rah ‘cea were trronged ‘ta~be= simple. 1 the major lene iets a A Seasoned
- ‘e. | and I know that the public ‘every+ At Los Angeles-= a ‘ 1.45—Mre. Lenoing ve. Mrs. alt. 3s ee he © ‘| moundsman nevertheless,
crepe od gt lg hockey | Where will be behind any move that | Qakland .... serie 0 1:60—Mrs.—Baylin-—va. Mra W Lew i ian eenmenten. Piha This probablf will result in Me-
corre at given their dues, and will give them good, clean entertain- | Zos Angles alas 4 7 . Fraser ‘ . | were at half-mast on the campus oft Keclinie caling on Kis young south
that sport writers ‘would make an | Ment whether it be professional or |/ Batteries—Krause, 1.55--Mra. Hodges vs Mra. W. W.
am H y r y rher ~ saw star, Bi (de, for Saturday's
F Bucknell 1 versity, where Christy pa t Emil Y¥de,
effort to writefai and just ¢ itictsme | &" nateur, And once again I wish to j Baker; Glazner, Crandall and Sand- : . Ne lapels | Hall.| Matthewson-,. is student, and on game Harris for that day,.may
where theyare, warranted. place my -plea publitty béfore the | perk, : | ey oe ACTOR AL .asTAUCTIOm 2.00--Miss Sayward vs. Mrs\/ many wusiness, houses rely on his veteran portsider, Dutch
7
‘oligarchs'-of ameteur—spert,to- ap- At Sun Francieec Burnes, ; ' body, -dete-}_Ruether,, although Johnson and Lee
SOUR GRAPES ply your rules in. conformity - with | vernon, ? SS The Bucknell student body, dele
irvine r P ' s 4 : 3 TS EN ! Miso ", |Meadows, opponents in the first
“+t can see that with The Regina | the progress of modernity. Whether | San. Frandisco ‘ The four things in golf that worry a-player are the possibilities of top- U | d Ladi ee eee hel tt tals ee ve. wili7have had three Spaiiczent:
TAésder it is just a edge of sour | we are professional or amateur ath- |; paiteries—Ludolph ‘dnd’ Murphy; | PIDs sliclhg, hooking and skying the ball: The latter fault Is the result) Pp ands rd liter of the PRI Gamma atte tenough to’ permit either to &o back
and jet me emphasize that | letes, we are all human, Why should | Geary and Yele. “* | of teeing the ball too high as a rule. This gives the clubn@sd too much} Matthewson’s fraternity, formed pam into the fray.
this is fot the fault “of the Regina | we not be classified as- such and | ee Ya | room to get underneath it, : Folldwing is the draw for playin} cecort. for the body from the}. The fifth game, now ts scheduled
public; tt is-rather the fault of the | judged accordingly? , The only, ap- | “ROUGHOUSE” WINS Another -cause is dropping the right shoplder, This 14 calculated to} the ladiew nionthly competition of | stoughton. home to the cemetery. here Monday, with the scene shifting
sports writers-in that town. whom I | parent difference is ‘that a préfes- | spoil the shot sometimes altogether as she club strikes the ground and the | the t plands Golf Club to-morrow ——_—_— “ weet to -Pittsburg for the sixth and”
have no hesitancy in raying have tr] atonat: receives remuneration —for)—Phoeiix,_—Arinona,— Oct. —_ 10 bat is onty_dribbied--offthe tee,Other times—it-sort_ofscbops tie ball Mies E. Mills and Mrs. Thompson BOUT POSTPONED | seventh, if the issue is prolonged that
pe majority of canes a ped A - si oi ~— ee en Ble ta Nelson, Mesa midile- | inte the air_as_the tendency is to bring the club up“duickly Instead afi Mrs. Hepburn and Mrs. Seniple —* far. It wilt “be, -rniess either team
ir in thelr—eritictes of anything | for ne play for _puble-|weight,—.won..._his _iwenty-seventh 1. ae ss ‘ ae - |
the pre-protession
Tiewina The tndivid who wrpte
thie arth may t have ‘bepn
——
is ‘ake Mise S.-Hiscocks and Miss E. Mac- tosto: Ma oO 0 , .
Baby tte vate fer ene out tye cg acnhy inant ene tage remem atthe iw lel nnn ato ard Na | eget ot
Profeasiona! xport was all richtwhen remembered that the love. of ‘the’, gained a, Mecision over young Men- | be very far_from the ground aos the higher the Valle pereher in the ate] Vis. Geigee ANA MIAG TY MAX WHIT, | Toney, HOT EMNTO™ Tor tret nietht.athboth camns ‘ax well: as Among -oh----
Regina had a pro-hoekey team; now-/ game in_as great an incentive to the | des of San Diegd in a siow ten-roued} the more difficult It is to hit 2 Miss Walfenden. and Mis, Price, inaver’ Field, was postponed vatil | servers who have watched the closely
da. ‘cojd-biouded mmercialism. 1! professional as it is.to the amateur,” I bobs nce nceteons (Copyright 1925" by the Bell Syndicate Inc.) , Mrs. Ellis and Miss. Isbister. i E
to-night becausé of fain, waged struggle so. far, 1 2
Sg TTL z
< SoC SPE eva UT
Ef ppeyodin nl RENEE PSTIOAR I tiger eee
Big Fellows
eee eae emer
Coming Out
Of Woods ‘Seeking Title
Uncertainty of Dempsey’é
in, Heavyweight Divisier
foitiodin Causes Big Boom
1. and Big Men Who Can
Sock Are Being Sought For; White Hope Cam-
paign to Find Man
Johnson Is Recalled
By ROBERT EDGREN
Met the Tin-eared Sport again yesterday.~
“have you noticed the return of the
“Say, listen,’’ said he, ‘
White Hopes,” P j
“*How’s that ?’’
“Why, I just.came down from a hunting trip in the northern
On theJevel, the camps are running out of lumberjacks.
Every rough, strong guy in the great, open spaees- has gone Lo
woods.
town somewhere fo get’a mana
job-as heavyweight ehampion:
full of ’em.’ But you go throug
six-foot loggers are scarcer than bull
moose on Long Island. When | got
down to tidewater, at little town
there, I found a local gymnasium
open day and night and eight-——count
‘em, eight—big—battting behemoths
who didn’t know a boxing glove fre
@& saucepan, working with coaches
and sparring partners and watching
each other for:fear dne of the bunch
Might-jump out and Pet AER at
Dempsey's title ahead of the mas.
= “There ain't ke up in
lumber country _ no’ more satthes
They're ail managing fighters end
expecting to make Jack Keurns look
Hke_a_piker, and all sending tele
grams collect to Tex Rickard-teling
Tex theyive got the sreatest heavy-
weight —the -worid.. ever: saw. under
cover and nearly ready t e sprung
on Dempsey or Wi \¢ and get Demp
sey if possible because this new guy
is six foot six and weighs a quarter
of a ton and can break axe helvee
with his fingers
STARTED IN B.C.
“Bince Lonnie Au slipped Big
Bill MeKinnon out of 2 camp up in
British Columbia and took him down
to Seattle to teach him how to step
Vor witht tiv lett foot and swing his
right without hitting the rafters all
the managers of little fighters have
closed up shop and gone to the woods
armed with contracts and powers—ot
attorney and measuring t
Honest—they give me the
I've had in fourteen
“I suppose
logger out of the
when you came
The ‘Tinvenred
around the gills
of times before
Now listen
Let me explain
down with me
You ought to
ROPE REVS Feet tat:
his knife and he’s
Wittard—-and—tor
ton. Why,
a
atin
Lpes
best laugh
years
didn’t bring any
woods with you
dpwn Il suggested
Sport turned “rea
id choked a couple
inswered
sald Listen
did bring a guy
this is different
this. gu He's
fitter emt with
bigger than
igher- than tat Nel
| found him he was
sitting on a log with his-hands in his
pockets letting anybody sock him on
the jaw for two-bits a sock He had
all the loose and all
the rest of the guys had skinned
knuckles I've got him |'down
now training back of a barber shop
and every time he swings on one
the boyé the seismograph at Harvar
University records
in Brazil.’
“E-suppose
after
said
“Who?
wed
AL
take
big
ar
he
he
I
bat
see
Jess
wher
«
ver in camp,
anew earthqus
you'll
be sending him
Dentpsey
before Christmas,” I
Me?” chuckled the
Sport I've got that
“I'm training this. guy
the rest of these battling
loggers when their managers bring
‘em out of the woods I figure he
can keep busy fighting every week
for the next year and net-run out of
work. That's where the real money's
going to be.”
in a year he might-have
erience to fight Dempsey
‘He might, at that,’ ‘said the Tin
red Sport, “and if I'm tired of}
having him around by that time I'l
give him a chance.”
WANT VARIETY
The scrambie for heavywetehta all
over the country just mow is 4uete
& popular demand for a little variety,
For three years there has been a lot-
of talk. about Dempsey -Wiils
, battle If some new heavyweight
could fight his way to the front and
provide he could earn
a mint whether he ever
reached the championship or not,
and all the managers of little
fighters know it
The: threat of Wills and the
threat of Godfrey, who has
touring the We knocking
second-rate white heavtes and
the dusky -fighters who “Gan
hauled into’ a ring with hir,
given almost ax“white hope’
to the new heavyweight rop.
There's no need of a “white hope
if Dempsey is going on fighting, but
Dempeey’s affairs have been #0
muddled that no one knows exactly
What" “he” will ~ do It__Dempaey
dropped out there would be a bally-
hoo for Wills as champion, and 'the
ballyhoo would) come very near
carrying him, inta the title, although
as a plain matter of fact, Wills never
has. done any fighting in the “ving
that preves him a ‘champion tn
ability.
MIGHT FIND ONE Lm!
In the coming year or so
country will
Yeavy weights.
xs .
Tin
to
enough
A
of
al action
noney,
lesser
been
out
all
be
have
aspect
t
the
be searched for white
And you never can
Reduce Your Shaving Expense
—and Improve Your. Shaving at
the Same Time—Use the
CROSBY. BLADE
Sold Everywhere.
Cc. C. Craig Company Limited
here |
game |
to Knock Out ‘Jack
ger and train to take Dempsey’s
They wsed-to say ‘the-woods are
h the woods anywhere to-day and
tell—someone may find another Jim
Jefferies or a new and younger Jack
Dempsey There are thousands of
men who might rival them, with
training and experience
The White Hope
and following years,
|} bered. It provided. more interesting
fighting than the leavyweight class
nt krew—before GF has hridwr since:
Started the evening of
His10 when the country was stunne
jb} of the defeat of Jeffric
| Reno and the crowning of Jack .
aan asking of the heavyweights
| That -@vening a young teamstér
Oklahoma heard t? news
| Jon, went -te-the—nearest tow
started as a “White Hope.”
[mined to become a fighter.and kr
} Jolinson. out. ‘This was Jess Wi
and five WhHlard
j fairty suc; campaign amd
jthe “White Hopes," mét Johnsor
Havana and turned’ the. trick
knocking Johnson out In't tw
sixth round
MORRIS TRIED HARD
But
Hopes
Morris,
#er\
of 1910,
ig still remem
crare
July
news
years
essful
later
there were many other Wi ite |
One of the first was art
the Oklahoma Giant, Morrie!
ed in the Phillippines when only
sixteen, and knew. something about}
fighting He was a loc
| @ineer years later when
Ton . nson's trail, a huge
el-built fellow; #ix feet fou
weighing 235 pound A rich Okla
homa soil’ man took, Morris, to New
York after a few fig and matched
him with Jim Flynn as a
.
ta,
starter
-
RGER AND LIGHTER BA
'Would Make For
Cleaner Shots In
Golf, Says Vardoit
Cult of Small, Heavy Ball is
Form. of Hero Worship;
Want to Get Distance
Jim. Flynn gave..Morris
beating, but could not kn
” even discourage
spent time in a }
ing a broker jaw fixed
right on fightisg He
prominent “White Hope
out a lot of ,other hea
did fav speed ft
a champion: His specialty
tening tt Opes
many away
One
Hop.
Lerrific
a Tittle
went
a]
cked
never
‘ome |
fiat
put]
he
7 the
|
e rit
them
of the classiest looking White
Al Reich, a famous ama-
otputter who took up fighting,
Res h went through the amateurs |
| ke load of Buckshot and in his
professional fight cleaned up
White a wil? man with
Then his ger manager |
mistake and sent hir gainst |
the experienced Mor who knocked |
Reich: so cold. in the second. round |
that Reich never did fight with much }
| confidence afterward
PALZER SPECTACULAR
Most-speotacular o
| Hopes was big Al. Palzer of Minne
| sota, developed in . white hope
} tournament held by Tom O'Rour
| York Palzexy was six
8 was
s)
a
| first
| Batlor
t f the wt
jin New
| three-and-a-half — hes tal, weighed
| oVer 20D Pounds, Was grandly buift
and has the chin d map o
fighter, If any fighter ever had
| knew nothing about backing
had-« ferocity In conf
Jack Dempsey's
former manager of
brought East by Al
White Hope; teuted
cessor to the title
tore Kaufman apart
fight-that “went._ only
And Kaufman wasa real fighter with
a wicked punch. He had knocked out
Sam Berger, Jack Sullivan, George
Gardner Mike Schreck, Battling
Jehnson, Jim Flynn .and a score *
other well-known heavyweights
the, time
WELLS'S RIBS SOFT SPOT
Later England sent - Bombardie
Wells over as a White Hope, to Ket |
& match with Johnson, Wella wasa
wonderful boxer and a great hitter,
but fragile around the ribs He
murdered Palszer for two rounds, |
knocked the giant down repeatedly
and looked a sure winner when Pa!
zer rushed in anf swung @ savage
hook Into the Bombardler's body and
broke him in two. Poor Al died a}
hard death. Visiting his home he/|
was shot by his own father, who was |
on a drunken rampage.
Fred. Fulton, the long plasterer,
appeared in.4913- with a atring of}
knockouts, mogt of them in from one
to three rounds. He went along ta
g§reat ahape until Knocked out by Al
Palzer, and did somé good fighting
for three or four years afterward
until he was whipped a few times
and took to faking Inatead of fight-
ing. Fulton had.the physical equip.
ment of a great fighter, but no heart.
If he started winning nofliing could
stop him, but when a couple of hard
punches shook his confidence he be-
came the fanciest diver in the bual-
neas. Fred could drape his six-and-
a-half feet on the floor in a. dozen
different ways.
MeCARTY a OF BEST
There was. corking fighter in
the White Hop bunch—Luther Mo-
Carty. Lather had Indian blood in
hia. veins, and Scotch and Irish, and
hq knew no fear’ He was. six feet
four and weighed 205 pounds, and he
could put-it-allinto a punch: Luther
knocked out Joe Grint, the Dhiladel-
phia Iron Man. -He- knocked , out
fourteen’ men in —tit#. first twenty
fight and one of them was Carl
Morris, In six rounds. He ~ fought
Jess Willard ten reunds, no decision.
Jbo-knocked out Al Pulser in eighteon
ur F
He
up; and |
K
as
five, rounds
ppear On Horizon
dim Furadds
LEPT AADE such A
WRECK OF CARL MORRIS |
in WIS FURST “WHITE Hore”
a
APPEARANCE AT AMADison
SQUARE GARDE Trey IT
WAS K
bate «a
D JIMA HAD
WRAPPED
OND His Fr
GUABOAT SMITH CAE
NEAR KNocriAS BiG JES
out
§ WILLARD
OF TWE"WniTe Hore" Ciass.
AS Jac OEMPSEY Jans |” THAT Bapy
Sume cond Sac |”
Wow! Wow! Wow! C’mon You Pirates!
That's the Battle-cry of Young Patrick Moran, Tiniest Rooter for the Pittsburg
ther un
late Pat
a few tee-her
in their pennant
That the master~-sty
playing’wonderful golf
big champlonship Is evi
put on at his home cx
the uncanny. figures: . 47
an average of about, 44
most marvelious performance which
well envy.
courses gol now-a-days, t
bunkered and trapped
list of them
even althoug
lenced by the
rae,
67
66.
68
Vardon waa fifty-five years of age last May.
win-the British GCpen Championship
never-be duplicated. He also won the
Moran,
t down the stret«
South Herts,
strokes per hole for
Totteridge is not a championship of course,
yut-it is a testing course of some 6.400 yards
Pennant Chasers
YOUNG PATRICK MORAN
e distinction of being the youngest rooter the Pittsburg Pirates possess.
ff the Cincy
remembered as m anager
hees make up Pittsburg Pat's battle
». He doesn't confine
ive a Row fn 69 or Better
all, Marry ‘Vardon, is sti! capable
h he cannot now-stand the strain of
nine consecutive rounds he last month
Totteridge, N. Here are
66, 69 and 67-"Ptts figures out at
the nine 18-hole rounds—a
the most Drilllant young player might
as championship
well
of
i
London,
67,
He ia the only man ever to
six times and thels feat will probably
United States. Open twenty-five years
ago and tn 1920, when fifty years of age, tied for second place in that great
event.
events lterally)/by the hundred. He
the greatest stylist and player the
Tis too, won the, Oériian “Open before the war and sther important
fa atill regarded by all the experts as
ame has ever produced. He is an
extremely- well off man and’ does not have any financial cares to worry
him now that he Is approaching the
“sixties.”
Very strange to re‘ate, Vardon'has only once during his long and glorious
career on the links ever made a “Hole-in-One,”
whilst his Scottish rival,
“Bandy” Herd, on the other hand; pleads gulityto seventeen such perfor-
mances—a total no other player has
approached.
—_
rounds at Vernon, Cal. Al Kaufman
in two rounds, Jim Flynn In ‘sixtpen,
ea lot of others In a round or two.
McCarty claimed the heavyweight
titie, and—many — regarded—him-as
champion. He aied in & peculiar
way. Diving in the tank at’ the Unl-
versity of Pennsytvanta, be struck
the bottom and injured his neck.
Only a' week later he fought Arthur
Pelkey, a fairly good heavyweight,
at Calgary, Alberta, guing in without
any training. As they came together
Pelkey struck a light right-hand
blow and McCarty fell at full length oss
and died a few minutes later. The
autopay showed a-fractured vertebra,
A _Guriovr thing -was that two-third
of the break: was about a week old,
am réported by one of the exainining
physicians... Luther had: gone Into
the ring arid had fought. -with a
broken back, Pelky was exonerated
of et) blame for the accident..- But
| pitted
He's
Reds a few seasons ago Wow!
cry as he urges the Buccanners on
his cheers to his own back yard, either.
|VardonShoots Nine Rounds
the affair broke his nerve, and he
sleo dropped out of sight as a white
hope.
Tommy Rurna tried to make Jack
Lester a white hope. Burns had lost
| the title to Johnson In Australia, be-
fore Johnson fought Jeffries. Lester
clouted a few before he was Knocked
out by Sam Langford.
SMITH HARDEST HITTER
Then there was Gunboat Smith, a
175-pounder. who developed the
greatest punch of his day and put up
some extremély sensational fights
The gunner was a lean, wiry fellow
and began boxtng while in the navy.
His specialty. was a downward curt-
ing hook that latided Just above, the
victim's left ear, and was acienti-
fically described as ‘the “occipital
punch.” With this punch Gunboat
knocked out nearly all the best
heavyweights of-the White Hope era.
He fittenead Charts Miller in a
round, Mexican Pete Everett. in two,
Bo rdier Wélls tn two, Jim Flynn
tn five, George Godfrey in two, Jim
Savage in threé, Jim Stewart in
seven, and took decisions over Sam
Langford tn twelve and Jess Willard
and Frank Moran in twenty rounds
each. In the Willard fight Gunboat
hit the. giant so hard in an early
round that Willard tincanned | for the
Feet of the distance.
Frank Moran with hie “Mary Ann”
punch was a rugged battler, but he
never did learn how to use anything
that swinging right. He had a
nee with: Johneon tn Paris, and
lost a decision, There were many
more “Hopes,” but most of them
hopes_in_name_only—- However, the
woods are -atill fuil ofthem, and the
modern gold rush led by Big Bill
MeKinnon may bring out some big
fellows who can fight.
(Copyright 1925 by the
~ ~otieate Inc.)
Bell
Syn-
\
‘ter trait
Castoff Pitchers
Brought Champions
Through T To Pennant
Coveleskie and Reuther Prove
Mainstays While Ferguson
Delivered in Pinch
By HARRY VARDON
r The Rules of Golf. Committee
has
long heen’ dnimated by a
| desire to enforce the use of-a
bat-giving less power in driving
and requiring greater nicety of
control than-the
kind now
in
c
general demand. Hitherto, popu-
lar
opinion has heen too strang
for suth a change to be intro-
duced
the q
vestion
but a of tacki!
found
new way
has been
in the
form of the motion which the rgles
coniltt
meetin
Club
mitter
! that,
|
| Canadian C hampion | Iz
Peckinpaugh Rated as Second._
Greatest Shortstop; Eclipsed |
Only by Wagner
4
By “BILLY EVANS
Cast-off pitchers played — a}
second American League’ pen
nant for Washington.
Two veterans, Coveteshie and{
Reuther, delivered from the
start. In the home stretch, when!
= Nats Were slipping, a third
t, Ferguson, stepped into the
Neb h and tided the over
a very rough e#epot
When yuu figure that this trio of
near-discards won over forty games
you get some idea of the important
part they playa tn the sor
Washington
On the
cinched, Reuther
eighteenth victory of the season
The same afternoon; by winning the
soognd .gesme..of g deuble header,
Ferguson cinched the championship. |
The day previous. Coveleskie, |
against Cleveland, the team
that turned him adrift, won his
twentieth game of the year
club
succe
day the pennant
turned
was
his |
- +
For two veteran pitches to win
forty gamew after being regarded as
through by a majority of major!
league managers, was certainly 4
break for Staniey Harris
+
VALUABLE PLAYER
The selection’ of Roger Peckin
paugh as the most valuable player in|
the American League for the season
of 1825, was a most happy cue
Without -a doubt Péc-@)paugch
the greatest shortstop I have seen
action during my twenty years’
neetion with the American League
Hans Wagner, famous shortstop of
the National League, is the only one
I would give a higher rating
I regard Peckispaugh — the equal,
probably. a bit the peer of Wagner
as a fielder. The advantage Wagner |
enjoyed at the bat, however, entitles
him to the edge over Peckinpaugh
Peckinpaugh is not only a
ball player, but also a real
man. The typeof ethiete—wi
credit to the game, who add
to the good name of the
pastime.
Peckinpaugh is a fine character of
the Walter Johnson model, modest,
unassuming, yet most courageous, |
It ia indeed a compliment to the lat-
that he should achieve
after sixteen years of]
+
is
in
lustre
national
greatness
effort.
> =-s
Incidentally, it is a feather in the
cap of the Washington Club to have
two of its stars selected in succes-
sive years as the most valuable
players in the American League
|
|
ee ae” |
A GREAT BREAK |
Getting back to Washington's |
cast-off pitchers, Coveleskie, Reuttrer |
and Ferguson, }
Many of the wie men of basetyall!
scoffed at Manager Harris when rat |
refused to let these veterans pass out
of the big league. |
Coveleskie came to the Nats in a}
trade with Cleveland which-in no |
way weakened the club, while Rev- |
ther and Ferguson were secured
over the waiver route.
Good .southpaws are mighty
scarce. When all the National
League ‘clubs waived on Reuther it
made it seem as if “Dutch” were!
through.
Yet Harris believed in him. -He
worked on the the that the;
Washington defence Reuther's
control would make it difficult for
the position to score many runs
even ne some of “Dutch's” stuff were
missing.
He figured right. Working under
new conditions, with a chance of get-
ting into the world series as an in-
centive, Reuther has been one of the
moat effective pitchers in the Amert- |
can League.
Coveleskie and |Fergueon, lkewise,
profited under new conditions.
~_+ +
A willingness to gamble. with these
veteran. pitchers was. merely further
proof of the a judgment of
the: aigeipinglen-tenten
MISS ADA McKENZIE
Miss McKenzie won the Cana
dian women's golf championship
this year by defeating Mrs.
Alex Stirling Fras the finals
at Ottawa two we igo: She
entered the U.S. ladies’ cham-
pionship~ but was beaten in the
second round.
n
Leads World’s
Series Hitters
J0F HARRIS
Hitting honors in the
champ
measu
in
go
prespertive
year's
be pretty
year’s
would
pre
ball
the
time.
has
eny
fectior
makes
sal
of the
fmenufsetured
suggestion
mittee
know
rate, he has maintained hia a¥-
6é will submit
ng of the Royal and
“that tie Championship:
be requested to
in the amateur
vlonships of e
ring not less than
méter and welghing not me
1 unces shall be —-playe
L thinks that if all
eompetitors in n
champlonships—and: they
uoh the same as in t
be— consulted, th
ttle-objection to
matter of fact
if ns mention
by -serverel firme
of the Rules Co
have. been available for ao
Prebably the average pla
nothing about. them
tothe busin
eo
and
only,
nall
could
be ver
As 4
pe
1 for the smaller and heavy
tut the ball.of the propo
esa
Ancient _
announce
open
balls
1.68 inches
ore
a?
the
ext
wilt
his
ere.
the
golt
ed,
at
m-
me
yer
“at
ler
sed
new championship standard has been
tried
golfers
the w
towards
NO
If it
by a good many
and I believe that feeling
has been rather favora’
hole
it.
ELP TO POOR PLAYERS
wére tried in next seaso
neeomplished
on
dle
na
chawnpionship Iam sure that {t would
not h
these
of sk
specifi
of an
were
Cer
cought
i pl
case
compe
mately
sine
tota,
anytb
| MISG
;
}
|
|
o Ret hh.
vanta
fondly
pinyer
ball,
the
heavie
I
advan
cumst
long.
luck t
cor
place
assert
neede
The
a form of hero
of. th
jong
The
are ¢
could
and
heavy
hitter
the ordinary
handi
The
t
essent
| cand
force
dema
pra
sake «
|} of ball was
was t
a ball
It
cult 1
would be
same
ow
ditions,
+ought to ha
rease
the
nded
went
tical purposes!
elp an
any way affect the value
events as the supreme
ill Its introduction in
c tournaments would be
experiment to be
found that
th
practical
and it may
cl Mp lonships, ought
ptiliae d for experimental p
tainly in their ideal, state
to be tests of the
ayed everywhere, and.
we should- have the men
te in championships-—appre
400 —using a ball of difier
1 welg from that favo
ih
number has heen estimated
ing from 600,000, to 760,000
UIDED EMULATION
Lalo
The smulitaudet
but the small,
esarily gain the
from that
believes it secx
using the larger and ligh
able, I think,
of strokes
ndicap
in the
hot nec
gt tele
The pf
numb
to the
faith
as t
h men,
their
r ball
whether
pure in
ances of grou nd
run..to half-topped.shota
hat promotes flukes. In th
matches may be won t
ve b but who
confidence in such conditl
ing themselves when they
da?
cult of the
the
tage
small
worship
e fact that moat
drivers use
n they ose
xoept hy hard
not-otherwise be
pecuinrity of the sin
rubbercore-is that the —h
& gets the most out of it,
mortal is likely
capped by it
reason that -the
lacks the punching power
he ball awasy—eclearty; tt
fally a ball for the man y
eliver a- strong blow.
with the “gutty”
but hav
heavy bal
It is b
of the v
it fa that t
hitters-—-t
to
is
e never m
etic of s
of length
when any wei
and
I never u
than 29 dwts
enough
Stilt,
the
and,
he pop
of more
far
it seems di
average go
o convince
Het sae thine gad
which
inferlor player to win,
of
tests
esq
Lat
dropped if in
ba
not
Ure
ther
game as |
thig
wha
2aL
eng
rett!
most other Britésh golfers, whose
us
hat_
heavy
adv
it
us
iter
to giva,
hey
who
amalier and
that gives H
and
eas
hat
ca
on
are
tis
orn
ery
this kind. of ball.
hey
hey
jong drivers—
ati,
ard
while
be
normal
to
is
who
I used ta
when occasion
ade
mweing for the sheer
gh¢
31 dwts,
sed
for all prac-
ff-
fer
that what the long drivers use is not
nec
sessarily
At
best for him. Nevert
is a faliacy
hes
So far as coricern’ the size, T think
t
ie njoyment
new
ordinary
in a ball of the
dlameters It sits up m
the
golfer would find
proposed
uch
| more invitingly on the turf than the
| present ball of minimum dimensions,
| body
which
would
uses
that nearly eve:
therefore.
is the one
Tt ta.
promote more wood
ry-
easier to
| etub play for the shots up to the hole
‘Tr weuld help to give the brassie; and
mare
particularly the spoon-
one of
| the pleasautest and simplest of clubs
te
The
use
it4# wld Place itn the
game,
small bail now In vogue Iles eo
} closely-to the sojl that almost every~-
body
| elub-and-dig for it instead of playing
is prompted to
take an iron
-}.the old-fashioned,..honest .shot.¢bas—.-
| nips the ball up clearly from the tart
series so far go to Joe Harris, Wash- |
inaton outfielder
hitter and plays first base as well as
the outfields, He only joined
champigné three months ago and
now comes tt far, a nice shee or thé
melon:
TATE TO MEET HERMAN
Portland, Ore., Oct. 10. Match-
maker Harry Hansen of Portland an-/
Pnounced
yetterday that he —had
signed Bill Tate and Tiny Herman, |
henvyweights,
round main évent here October 16
This -is the: bopt that was post-
poned recently as Tate injured one
otis thumbs...
}
Thi
world’s | MAKE CLEANER SHOTS
s problem of attacking
the
Harris is a great, centre of resistance In the ball—due
to its snug settiement close to the
ot
the
prolific
the | ground—has probably been the catee .
divot-taking whit
thas been such a marked feature t¢
the
P
game during recent
years,
layers—even some of the champions
| feel that they: must get under the
| bail with an iren club; the endea
| frankly to. lift up a lump of the
and t
he bail with ft.
J presume to say this fs not
expe
way to- piay— soit. =. ts
ent. If the trger ball
| prempt peters to. tackle it in.
to appear tn the ten-/ manner of
the -cienrly-hit
a
the drive from the tee—it will be’
welcome. Innovation for that
alone.
Tt will make-the shats
‘
by ‘sabe ns
VICTORTA DAILY TIMES,
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925 —
bake scones, make butter, and ken as Tiayrpperr; just-er-hand-and
; f. ar sit —make—no
= | ; when a hen‘’s no’ working, My first T I " N sont . so ; ay rear e
; mira yee Se ee ay ye e escope, As ow contrary Te mt we ma fread th
- ail : 2 nba, 4 =< ai - - a - Te ‘ | : ° - t -Jor dlaphanc us bedies may
f (T - q “ are . : ate beauty, bib Lm As ONE,..CAD Englishman Invented formed that the most remote ol
aa Site’ th ‘s ‘Sains Jetters at an incredible dis
Q 4 ad ed me to marry e cook at hd ; tance, and may number things
. ; ys the Big Hoose. So I'm lonely, [ve], Claim of Oxford | though ever so small, and may make
2 MOMENTS 3 SHORT STORY WRITER P 3 got .£50 in the Post Office Savings | — lthe stars alsa appear as near as wo
ARE PS : Bank. In my bottom drawer I've got , | please.”
P ame = : te . Peas blankets, lace curtains, ten yards of Oxford, Oct. 10.—Not satisf P SEAT x ‘
Pe # ‘ ‘ aad mene +4) Fm ¢ . 10.—Not se jed that However it fs avimitted that at this
ROVIDED IN Writing short stories as ah avoca~ Ph . Ted flantelette and-four-paire-of- silt opedit forthe invention .of the tele-] time it is impossible to know whether
MEIGHAN DRAMA Columbia—“The Fire Patrol.” - Fon Ja ‘the unusual habit possessed 4 aids s stockings. My age is 28. I'm no’ big | scope had been properly (placed, the Bacon actomity cinvented-2—tetescope-
Capitol—“The Man Who Found y ay mond Griffith .whom Para- . ’ " but I’m handy. I ken the Ten Com-| subject has been gone into at Oxford|or .merely worked out the . theory
- A e mount has: made a comédy star in # S mandments,_but-I'm-no’_blate at the} with the result that a clatm is made} \ipon which all magnifying glasse
In fhe Man, Who Found Him- imself, |“A Regular Fellow.” $ ‘ | Bicoers..o’ Edinburgh ot the Hielan'| that the instrument. was inventéd fis, poe gc 9 . Sees
eelf,” starring /Thomas Meighen ut|| Dominion—“A Regular Fellow.” Griffith's short: storfes have a , : ; ; Fling. Yours, very, very syncerely,|at Oxford by“ ati “Engtisthimarnr nt nena
the Capitol Theatre this week, Para-|| Coliseum—*The Pink Lady.” = peculiar distinction"that_ sets them 4 : : “Magrie C n” i - shmarnr amd) —qa- ro the possiblity of Dirges, an
= = é 3 that the only question to be decided | ox Ain, being, the Inventor
Smqunts-promizes “2° Men “powered Pra ynouse—“'T he Playhouse. Cars. 1 Seeanhhasd spert from: the Uterary : 2 Another book that will be of special| js whether that ‘“Engifshman was) py ay ree adie of tt e 7 a
st — of drama and. romance | ‘ollow that work éxclusively and_ of a ea oe ‘wo ~ta—--'Be o2 She + phtlonopher; prierey Paez er. « ponies J . ‘ -
re we: pa TE RN ESF ——_—$_—— some who do. The distinction: is Q Hebrides!” by Alasdair Alpin Mac- Sup mathis of the Oxford claim rth ot Bok to reed wine
Booth Tarkington wrote the story | that many of his stories have been J Gregor, M.A. (Wy and R, Chambers, | cregit jies-with_-bethe- the sai _ : ened vhs a rt oe - 8
ag Nae for Mr. Meighan. Alf jhan in a small Hudson River town, paid for and published. | Edinburgh). This volume, which is! jayvertiser” of the telescope ites ine “accordance wt s one
aoe who Mirected Tom in “The! He railroads the star to prison when For nearly two yeara this remark- fe ; : P 2 handsomely illustrated by .photo-| cist that he did not invent it, nor] ee oe aise ee ee ae ee
echelor Daddy," “Back Home and} he .discovers that Torh’s younger | ible young man has been engaged in 3 ’ ‘ $ gravures, consists of sketches which | aia the Dutch spectacle ected’ oon un ints red ance t remainer o iis
Broke, Pied Piper Malone’ and|brother hag been plunging in Wall striving for one of the goals he.has / aaquaint us with the glamor, thel oa gooorded ‘credit. as the Cirat whol son, Thomas, to assert the father's
vigr4 oO. worrowed bank funda to “cover up.”| Worthwhile and successful novel. 3 northern islands, the theme of so Ears | quote ; @ Y
Adapted for the sbresn by ‘Tom, Tom is shipped to Sing Sing when| When it is considered that. hig work betes ; much song and story, The author. men tt $ ? the Oxt . | demonstrated bis emeree Sir. Seana
Geraghty, The Man Who Found!the brother refuses to admit bis|in “A ‘Régular. Fellow!". kept him |” 4 ; who télongs to. the Clan Alpin, was Tea ke, in “i x kd, cei it m from a larry ene: a ye rah nd
mse lf is a story intense with in-|guilt.. While in. fail, he Jearna bis} busy at the studio for approximately E born in the Hebrides and has iin eect Roge Bs : wr ees 1] letters on- coins ay y nds
iecest~ strong, yital drama with a] fiancee is going to marry the man) twelve hours daily it can, be seen iS intimate knowledge of ‘the history, uury ger Bacon wrote jlaxses on open fields. *
punch and—“an appealing theitic of} who fut him behind the bare through| that he does not have much time for See customs and beautiful scenery of the -
love and regeneration, laid against al trickery. ' He makes his escape and} literary work. , 4 islards, As his style is vivid and
prison background as was ene of the| returns tp the home town, With the Mary Brian (“The Little French Pee ‘ easy, and as he has. an. eye. for
Dleséet of all: Meighan bila, “The] held | af two fOr oe ee en eet oe tran ha human interest stories in history and | Ii nternal and External Pains
y of nm Men.” ;
? ~ plants a- clevef, trap whereby the] Tyroge Power des > . in ‘real life, his book is not only in-
Virginia Valli, who was Meighan’s)} « ked banker is killed by a night aihare. ay gen ad binges ag Y forming’ but full of charm. . y are prom | relieved by
leading woran tn “The Genfidence} .
watchman. at the bank while he is} which plays at on ‘Theatr ‘ In his chapter on the superstitions R . EC CTRIC OIL
as ~ lis ah ss the, e -
are —— <7 cast n a ey too. | trying: to make.» getaway with the} this -week,. was ney ROR HRD Eawarad é peed for ages have been ournent in D THOMAS" ’ .
stage play ie et, Tanned contents of the vault Tom and the} Sutherland from Keene ‘Thompsqn's the’ Highlands of Scotian and in THAT WT HAG/BEEN'BOLD FOR NEARLY FIFTY YEAR cn
ks play, “The Firebrand,” h girl make up, this time for keeps. idabtation of. th Sfp the Hebrides, Mr. MacGregor passes AWD 18 YO-DAY A GREATER SELLER THAN a my
“heavy” role. ‘John Harrington, } £1 SOAK. Ups cet divighan NOketAlsterie take dieenh ia by Reginald i 4 on to us the curious information that BEFORE 18 A TESTIMONIAL THAT SPEAKS FOR ITS
man Treyor Charles —terenson, e, developing situations of genu- +" a ¢ oseph Mitchell . “a—catcis supposed to be good luck NUMEROUS CURATIVE QUALITIES.
Julia Moyt and Lynn Fontanie ap-yine. humor and drama . | \ only for MacKintoshes? fdr others it
Mg in m=) cast _- — Meighan—Tarkington and Pat a in r anist is rosa dach, or untoward. Ir the} 7-———S; . : —— =
ran is a rival banker of Meig-| mount! It’s an unbeatable combitna- same way a pig-is said to bring luck ————— ne
th g i g el to the Campbeii#. It has long been
=| “THE PINK LADY”. Stirs-Montreal| | ~ ced te "ail enlgen, AUR oa TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO~TO-DAY |
Witches” are said to transform them-
¢ , ae ies ob rg poe Victoria Times, October. 10, 1900
DOMINION BIDS,ADIEU AT.THE | y:ttieni's sarous: sta” organine| (ge mlsen gta, ‘nares the roms af] oo
COLISEUM TO-NIGHT | od his transcontineftal tour here ’ Till within recent times northern
week, Seldom have the musi , fishermen turned home again if on The regular morithly meeting, of the street, bridges .a
THIS WEEK | cal people Of Montreal been so stirred 4 we ir way to. the boats they en committee Was held last evening in the .City Hall chambers
The Pink y closes at the|as they have during the three pro untered a woman, a person, or & The plan‘adopted by the Pdeific Steam Whaling Company for hauling
A Big Comedy
Raymond ¢
In. His Funniest Come
ORAL PSE The Pink Lady’) grammes. givensdn. this city. He has a hare, being firmly convinced that the Steamer Jennie off the rocka near Peint Arena pre ved succesaftl
written forthe Coliseum] playe
Bi
s(fe savers has proved an excellent ye-| of . eae ser gr ane set JOHN D. BEAMS AS GRANDNIECE WEDS—Joun D. Rocke- hey would bate ina forming, tBas The trim little stern Whieeler Monte Cristo, which, has. been operating
Tl it for the talented company.” Eva! eff: sisting wholly of- Bach's feller was in a jovial mood-when his grandniece, Miss Isabel Mr. MacGregor says further in this up: North arrived in port'to-day with a full list of passengers. She wilt
| Hart as the pink lady,” has had] great works-*fother progamme seb h Rockefeller, was married to Frederick W. Lincoln Jr: at, Green- same. chapter Ir parts of ‘the'} be tied up here for the Winter,
wonderful receptions evéry “night: devoted to his own compositions. Tt] wich, Conn. Why2. tt -was-the seventy-fifth anniversary of the diy Hebrides superstition is so mueh a u
; present tour} he got his first job. A camera man shapped this exclusive photo as second nature with some pedple that
George Bry done b need his-way | is pre ted that his
6s 99 || Mite tHe Eood opt it ait Colt=| wit prove phenomenal MMF Rocketetler etood inthe door of the church everyday occurrences are recognised | s
e ul ar e OW pou pelrons — fox! ae the Handiwork of the-arch-Liend
trot demonstrat |
himself. A well-known and much- |
I Am. the Man ll be shown Mrs. Jameson to respected Islesman: of my acquaint- |
ALSO rt the Coliseum The r This pic place among the recognized master-
Our Gang Comedy in “Dog Days” || tur tare Ldonel Barrymore Ad. Give R it | | pléces of this remarkable man.” anne was alae d ae ary
ys” } | ture: # RAT NAT PREECE EE OR , - d that is t-humor is| Under the influence of Highland Dev
Me rieteag rT r the best thing | ecttat on ; alvté— Pardon” yp Captain R. {and fell asleep neara-farin-where A}
ndics t s the bes 4
number of goats were kept} nie
: bd W_ Campbell ¢ . o nN r
De Luxe Presentafion \ that Mx, Barryma@re has -cbne in) Tuesday Evening, | Vv. Campbett (Wand R. Chambers, | 2Um0CF ne eetds he was. rudely
renee a Edinburgh) The .« ho jumped
THE Velvet RADIO hiv Tong and honorable scree: career: Le tne saithe it a catkire-cherger;.emacencd. by a bearded billy-soat MEZZO-SOPRANO
ALE VOICE
ers in the music sea- | 4 | anada a, judging by
| . j ieee T) Tle i = ate } butting—at- him, and the poor man
tals are announced | 18 F Greys t i fiteston field '
meeps GIRL PIRATE IS The first is that iis narrative, he } , much more, W'ts and co ld not be convinced that}
hich re | wae Gtapevered- utterly -out—of--bis . Assisted-by ;
sees NCR oot Me OW) eee "| UNA CALVERT
LILLIAN GISH in “ROMOLA* wooden | shacks
}
}
|
|
away on a deserted island] ed y niston, one were entiful n “the-—buffalo
off the Florida Keys, the pretty| younger planists of the city, Harold’ LITERARY NOTES 4 cg Pascoe good deal of CZECHOSLOVAKIA TO PIANIST :
young eit pirate, captain -ef-e- ~4 t t ne oe and Ira} » has to do with the humors
sen rumarunner, and the secret ser wor | Ret ga RECORNpRNINGE I ~<a rane tte wig} OF, © etitamnent of Bighland fr REPAY DEBT TO U.S. T
e agent, who had baited and trailed] Ch 10u Jamesto A x That w ARE TET Presbyterians i nie lon
. ally bury thelr ¥ o th bate mun las vf Maria Chapde € and Chez dre of Mr. Campbell's enterprising r q T 7 4
PLAYHOUSE mos ‘azing manner. ‘This is wumar » vO naster| Nous . delightfally written in- | feats was to import @ party of Scotch Washington, Oct. 10.—Arrangs Te ;
“ee . . el ew il gi TNS maidens e married to his;pments for funding the Czecho- THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 22, at 8.15 p.m.
Stage Screen c Bagh <4 : from the sing treasures of tt us rpretation of French ¢ . relor 3 toners. Ag a result}{-slovakian debt -to-the—United
Reginald Hincks Presents “ . t \ is The Chopping Bee and Ot
= he . 1 +m. ng ‘ el ue ¢ 40 Aver i Scotch || States were concluded yestertay — om. re
A Super ‘Show. of Merriment and |) j2e “Uhh PR ees Nele| Rubenstein, Schubert. Greig, Saint] Gaur A Rrorres—by | panare he P a ‘wth pe st eebtiembint he On ae Dash OF Prices, S5¢, $1.10, $1.65—Tax Included
usic '. 3 ; ied 43 3 5 | =
provides th
i ith few of || $215,000,000,-ro~te“ttqatdated over
“The Playhouse Carnival” |) yi: .ocuine action
amusing. || a period of sixty-two years
background of the
: be lot was the
‘ on |
Cast includes Misa Corrine Vaughan, || Main, the battle ground of revenue G Q ; k A . ; Compay? of\’Toronte)
. . ee an soprano Loats and the modern galleonms laden et uc ction who y teacher { bo y in
Sorgen with gin and whisk) Komaneer, ad wits f Montrea las choser
EVELYN BRENT In Adie aa ae epee On Hecla Group University Of Montreal, has chosen
“FORBIDDEN CARGO” | ‘via" ah ke Sats ais se a ra ec
Nights, 7 to
Victorin translated Ir
Malt-Orders Now Received at Ftetcher Brothers—
. ple habitant, has in) reality written
Mewart. 5 t: 3.—(Ry Mail)| about characters whom he knew and)
Het 1 net t sasociates, | ty y Hie style is ex
CHARE TEMURRAY A Bt ae Rod —ourge—-MeserTuUTsrrely. EnpTe,. restrenpietueses
the joys { sorrows of his own pec
IMPORTANT ROLE IN | sitertor 1° none the head itmelee eee et
COLISEUM “THE FIRE PATROL” | ore si wwe wnare ani nave arranged
Bwansea as tt
The Stage rlie Murray, who has been get- | "™ett¢ 1 ore assays $1.60
‘ : ailver, .$38,00
Mat ra
eloquent |
he call
The Collseeum Comp i URE . . a Avera * | s everywhere amongat
per. cent t
co » , ve of the great river At one
t
rhe Musical Come : An ee hee” * ' ;
: ” ast ea eat 0 | value per ton, $111 me it i n the Chambly Road, that = Wey . Rs .
io - of Bp 3s TI taked e claim , ing id Canadian of strong character, y ae J "
The Pink Lady” | siccrc" wrote: f They stah me, naming | Pre aie Welix Delage, steadfast | A
3 atromney Se ha tt t hly prospected, | as, the’oak growing before his door, | Q : ,
canta nate “neta PY — nev inns dé -unty a short} offers- the moving xpectacle of his ae | ’ : : #7 / , :
LIONEL BARRYMORE in we 5 , __ time ag ’ anys thére 44 simple dreams-of identification with Cm 5 as “yy
+“ ” di lderrenion yom (We st t running through, in-|his native soil, and. Gisplays that) es" € Frock °
I Am the Man npr hepshs er pe -cniba qhapiclaglV “fr er he 4 from which} firmness of heart which’ no money | ‘ ‘ /, r orn nr
ach es Fis age ly |. they produced their ore, that he will| can suet in uprooting from bis} ; : 4
Ales “FELIX THE CAT” Franey i Mann and __Helnte } int . : he. pr ty is twelve! ancestral fields And again, it is ‘ ; “ ALL,
TICKLE’S ORCHESTRA ‘athe pieture-lovit ibtl «|-River. at_Nine-mile,. two. sation Lis , ee et thet | ; . -
; oe , ‘ ‘ Bra aitong va . ¥O les} Saules hamlet. It is the story of the) 5
stor roche agp to fans | ae ee AO raeee | Doctors urge oats for breakfast, because oats start the
gigantic elm, ‘cut
+been be : Salmon|under the Quebec: sky, beyond the}
ouple of years—ar jf butit on a wagon grade. centuries of veneration for its} . digestive organs functioning naturally and regularly for
Hes for the e high-grade shoot from which eng by t very acts of those! ee * 7 . : . - cs
10 write (rap make the | the shipment came varies from_one| gi4 Oy ieed it and who_wept Oe the day: Combined with milk or cream, they furnish
“Haml “othelios” and, “Mac- | to three feet in width and its widest| over its dead-trunk. Then, further | nature’s-most. nicely-balanced nourishment.
beths” of § kespeare look ike: Abaa} runs under the south ¢ hickamin| away, in Ancienne Lorette, another % 5 ; _ * -
Tea Is: Optional lll ¢ di But then Charlie will er Alongstie the high-grade A |
sie Nas so 1 yt Charming legend: the mystic terri- Wisely select the food, and you will promote sound health
he oa Mbutliod | tory of the Hurons anc the wonder~ ey i . re
- eniraens— Wan bulled— “by ful posebuak, the delightful rosebush . ; in all the family “
- hand” down to the trail, but in the 4 i i i
| | Spring, when there is plenty of snow,|Of the Madonna , ; Now you may have hot porridge every morning, no
lit can be rawhided at a minin Mr. Musson is also the fortunate Pod “ - “ ae dae
| einen NUM) ublisher’.of another outstanding : matter how rashed the breakfast hour is, for Quick
COLU MBIA ; ee ee Lae Ah ear Heme 2 Quaker cboks while coffee boils, From 3 to 5 minutes is
William Wallace. .This author was all you need to make wholesome, appetizing porridge.
an a : brought up in Nova Seotia, sailed e :
L TO-DAY y before the masts for many years, and . Quaker Oats and Quick Quaker are made from the cream
. Nilssor M ‘ ha lread shieved international . :
—s Suuemy' in cs nae ee tis realistic novels of the : Zs of the oats crop. Only ten pounds in each bushel of the
D e * ~ nea. An in the present volume, the . finest oats are sufficiently rich and plump to be placed in
ance J 5 | hero in each of his stories “was a
e ire atro ! Fodne Note: Moatien, Wks Bee ee ° the Quaker cartons,
| and makes many stormy voyages
Wouldn't it be rather nice: to : i before he becomes a skipper. Anon Quaker Oats for those who like the large, regular-cooking
bring yo nds here and enjoy A Mighty Sea Spectacle | Campbell, the feading figure in this flake. Quick Quaker for those who want the Quaker
r jall tines daneant? ALSO | A story throws up his divinity course, :
ve, which include “PERILS OF THE WILD” breaks with his puritanical preacher Oats quality and flayour—but quick cooking.
ad can dance 8S. Family Robinson unele, and proceeds to go to the devil
en ar oe Story of Swiss bid ; i by casting In his lot with brutalized
satiormen, Cynical as he is and de- Only in sealed, dust-proof cartons, bearing the
based as have been. his habits for pay of the well-known Quaker. . Your grocer
write tt
an ambition! “T
years, he has a root of goodness in
At the Rear The Island Arts and Crafts - him however, and after tremendous both kinds. Use the one you like best.
. ; Society experience he sees the error of his
of the oR e.* rere See meal a4 dad : : e .
| human an divine. u le
GARDEN Empress Hote! 16th Annual Exhibition h are some passages in this novel that /
= of Qriginal Paintings, Drawings, Late of Hub. Barber Shop seem to moto be melodgamatic. itis ;
eS D ns, Crafts, etc 2 the kind of yarn that pins the reader |. :
° ' iP , oy Located at 103 Union Bank fj to’ the chimney corner until it is
4
-
WILL BE HELD IN THE finished It will add greatly to
ART GALLERY: Building, 612 View Bt. Captain Wallace's reputation.
And will. be glad to meet all his Another story of the sex by a well-
\
MURRAY STUDIO OF | CRYSTAL GARDEN | I and also any’ new Ff) known English writer is “Michael
} SOCIAL DANCING Belleville Street Entrancg My London experience, together Bray (Hodder & Stoughton) by Taf- , . : 4
QMemper National Inst Soctal From lE-with my oew equipment, parses frail. Sag is eet oF av . :
lui > = : of the highest reputation in Bob- navy fromthe time he joing 1.3 4
iw : ; - ; ~ :
Oem ere acca [If Tees Ome BO tO Bas Oke SE HH tion: Srrestineac Hate ar oats Pl ort of isutevants Tee story. pale ~~ |
of Ballroom Dancing, on none | From am, to: 6 p.m, y Fecal cat, allows’ me to ponitively stripe of Meutenant. The story puts
Diploma, New ¥ Admission, 26¢; Children, 10¢ guarantee my work him through the mill, under fire in
Syocker BIA TT OR” : Sem : , ; the Boxer rebellion at seventeen and
PHONE Figs ON Oe Benece ice ee Phone 458" for Appointment: twice to the China station before he
—_ is. barely out of his teens, Taffrail,
aaa p — - ~ . whd has served tn the nayy himself,
wee ~~ YT = AS ay writes from first-hand knowledge
— 4 +) ’ and_with abundant humor, E
CAPI ae 1S ee . BIG DANCE Joseph Conrad's last novel, "Sas-
pense,” is to be published. next
Thomas Meighan's Mightiest Masterpiece ' TO-NIGHT month. Although unfinished athe
wr : very different thing from _moat of |.
With VIRGINA VALLI . Garden
huge fragment, full of power and
time of Conrad's ‘death, it contains
rn these uncompleted works of men of
AL8O; COMEDY—NEWS—REVIEW
. Promenade Only, 250 fire;-a fragment that will take its
90.0 oS .
_.... THOMAS MEIGHAN C MAG ict tana Seite, ee i
. : iN BOOTH FARMINGTON - ee Fs = ‘ Crystal troduction, “with its splendid quall-
: “The Man Who Found Himself” . Ure of creation and-atmosphere,-teca
genius. X ffigment—ves;" hut «
_ SECOND SECTION —
VICTORIA: BC, f art RDAY, OCTOBER 1 10,1925
GOVERNMENT. FREIGHTER "ie ta ron RAIN AT POINTS LESSENS
AGROUND IN ALBERNI ___“*#oeizsives DANGER FROM FOG WHICH
Vancouver, Oct Recalling the
. heyday..of the Klondike the steam
i ship Princess Mary brought south
. : | with her on her last trip the largest
| single shipment of gold for a number |
of years. Nearly $400,000 in precious
1 metal was carried in the strong room
= of the steamship on her arrival in
Canadian. Miller kiteere Below Franklin “Light, Al) %:i: pn. Mondane he ith ot The apy Skippers Dit Not Take “Boots.Off in “Four
bermi Canal; Her Cargo “Is -Being~ Shifted—to! nee” “Nights Running, and ‘Relief From Lessening Fog
Lighten Ship; Was Proceeding Up Canal in Fog | a Eagerly Heralded; Several Vessels in Minor Mis-
When She Went Ashore. HIST () RY OF haps, But Total Damage Blight.
Fog this morning added one more scalp to its string when the Rain at many pgints to-day lessened the thick blinket of; fog|
Canadian Government Merchant Marine carrier Canadian Miller ES UIMALT Ay that has hung over coastwise shipping now for over seventy-two
ran fast aground in the Alberni Canal. Reports received here ' | iours... Mest sailings in inland waters.are being made on time,
> * *
stated the Government freighter was ashore below Franklin
EMMA ILEXANDER \PINESE UULD stores
| launched in and is of slightly
WILL DOCK MONDAY, = FISHERY TENDERS "ss ec
Japenese firm in the fish-oarrying
trade, as tenders and supply ships fer
ntin ed | Olympia lL _ and Olympia Ih. pl Btn crafi engaged on. thé
ony Ste Dated EA eaten
: Time Built at San Mateo on West
Inaugurating the first Monday. ar- Coast For Fish: Carriage
Fival wt this port onthe. Winter |
achedule of the Admiral line; -the| The Olympla IL., the second of two
Emma Alexander will make port. oD | Japanese craft built at San Matgo |
Monday evening about 10 o'clock. | for the fish-carrying trade arrived at
| She will eall outbound again.from iinse—port recently for vornment
here on Thursday at 4t-pan--whtie+ survey. She ts sixty fect tong, of som
} the Dorothy “Alexander will artive on it
Thursday to sai] the following Mon- = = — -—-______ fj
day, ; $a —- — ==
} The Emma Alexander and the Ruth : ’
Alexandér will arrive on ss faa Alu STRAL I A T EUR PE
j and dail on Thursdays. The Dorothy oO (@)
| Alexander will arrive on Thursday, NEW ZE ALAND : x
to sail the following Menday Va Honolulu aad Suva | Cherlour S soathiclaptoe Aaste
The Emmu Alexander ind the} “ amptoa-
ps f | . * new and weil-appotnte wenger | OCt £1, BNov. 18 . Mi
“Light. Further 1 from Alberni later in the day stated the and the passenger Services between Coast cities suffer little inter={Ruth Alexander will arrive on Mon | ners hd trem Vance Bee ove 4h, e Melita
dight. Further messages from Alberni later i day stater ; ‘ . days amd sail-on Thursdays. . The | “Niagere’: (20,000 tons). Ort, 21° Dec, 16 ; Jo, Heifast. Glasgow
Canadian Miller was working her cargo, lightering ship, prepara- ' ruption. A lessening of the fog in the Straits has speeded up deep-! norothy Alexander will alternate be “Aorangt” (22,000 tong). Nov. 18 Jan. 13 2 N 9 Marburn
tory-tesworking herself off from the rock on which, she-rests. sea departures and. arrivals. Some skippers in _eoastwise service
Little details of the affair eould be learned, as the wires were | —~
ddwn for a while this’tiérning, and the first messages carried ontyy} Former Glory of Naval Statiort
meagre reports. ‘The Canadian“ Miller isin wireless*touch with Topic of Address Before
her — yuver headquarters.
ne rsh heeled nes ne ‘|. B,C. Histori¢al Association «+
+ Fe vessels of the B.C. Coast Service are plying with little ehange
te "Ehoce eS ieee ut ‘e annual meeting of the British] T™ Princess Karhieen gr oA
r receive om the agent ¢ ibia Historical Association was | hese on Atel OCES r| Port San Juan, Va
Gove
malt os ev yout to cle couver Island, and
rnment Te 4 tponed leat night to October 26,.yestervay. 4 Was abou
haye not had their. boots, off in four nights, and the lessening fog
means a general relief.
On-the triangle mun betweermSeattle, Vanedtver“and Victoria
| wheat a for Seattte - put back to her doek the skipper_of the «raft was brought f
t 1°23 ‘ ‘ ’ r 16 @” electh 6 ficers wil . x e “ - i =
bsesrey: Mutter nat a or Ltete cphmree + barred tert . olook thie mocnng, +! Victoria t6 appear before the court i
Light Alberni. - Cs a Laan = ‘rovincint-tor~}“Ehe- Princess 4 eon sustained mo | =
nine ; . nment Archives, Major F. V.Long-| 4 i pe wilt bey” Capt” Pe his
' lamage fine and
Pederson paid
| contirme 5 dl } te orpilation The Beginntr heck bn pert from Ses a 4 | went back to his ship
telephone nversatior ‘ e Pacifie Station and Esquimalt| take the 4.30 p.m. run out agian } s
| Alberr whet longshoremen W y v stablishment was! d for that port ; |
}reported to" have been ordered out to y Donald sort . The Princesa Louise took the 10.40
work har CAPgO, I Ne Eee oa pea ee preaieee sas| Abies Himes Mergecrie mae|| - LAME SHIPPING CHART
ular run from Yan
Vancouver Elevators Receive “x. ai ithe See acea th fajor. Longutatts’: beading’. pre-| geattle last night, and will
anadian
Heavier Shipments Than | ths coasiwise wade e_Canas eEmcnieot-the ai Soltee dias Lncinseto base the 1d
, jovernment Meréha Marine thenmesrt rer ave Tadarlieeiamary Dyeaiahadr em ee ae
Two Years Previous was at tht Mere peo. Her Pu? mousht the reader to etl eatedug wna eatOt Rainn tii
: : ent “from 3 ia Maru
}
mapolls
Steamer Master “Tan.
Winnine
iret a t | dense fog wv saQuIT . \ er {! Hope i on ' Master. Ton.
fifty ile x requi t No_repo ndic 7 he wove rrr 4 sali + tO) yesterday poorning r hed 4
ment freiehter w tance t. Gi, ourtenay | this morning after
“/BAVCHIMOWING ‘sac umeeartelse
porary
{
}part of call for British #bijpe. In| impact came , Arrangements will b
{1851 Rear Admiral Fatrfux Moresby | made in resgect to the Gulf ‘| -C.G.M.M. MOVEMENTS
ed Esquina » first adm| | servic emp . the
mmand the state And #0 ¥ Otter. afte 3 rer dam
history
ef Esquim n tish}age has been 3 tainec . Canadian Freighter left Bérken
Reported at Dutch Harbor] Prorcnsor WN. Sage smeed| the Gute Fetand route on her requiant rs <r eon eet eee
Ly 1 thor Canadian Higt adiiae feft, Vancou-
udink ® question n
‘’ fe ent, mie roe ‘ol 192: t - sal B® > : MORRO ME b+ Sak ame bROEa,
Maan oe conandinel weckof,1923,. After Eseaping Northern tor iunicution.ct-meorten cra! Be a. cy -tar tah fam dianmncticn sma. La
sr 1 ol , ory ) e! ra broug everal s wm into trou
with goc the eva 1m, ben Ice Pack i} British Columbia histor by the] h « brought severa
ings we bout ¢ housan ar seociation for usé¢ in the schools of] ble, all cscaping light with the ex anadian Tmporter lett San wees
- 4 : ees - “ | the province. He suegested that such} ception of the tug Monarch, sunk } ¢ for ondon and Antwerp Sep
mare et ae ean of the 19 ort Or ' . 7. might well be used in the Unive ty}in collision with the French steamer | tember 19
Se ent in the increase Of 3 rise company’s, tr the) of British Columbia Zenon in Sound waters, The Zenon) Canadian Obser urrived Van-
, Fchimn arr . A monument commemorating _ the ) a ladder over the side of the!
Thursday after @ triP) udorifices and the bravery of Sea Motarch up which the tug's crew
the nort? neitie ’ t ur =n tora ible ew seconds before thel
which } en «i on Gon “ ft tu and went dow ence Vancou
Heights, much ¢ on 0 ty welt Steamship Compar | nadian Miller arriv «| Vaneou-
uve 6 nb:
cent couver Ser er
radio September
rh recently unveiled Tort esac Admiral Dewey and the yer October 3
il} off y dedicated on Ox | Texan were‘in collision yesterday in| Canadian Wt left. San Fran
} tober 19 The unvelling cerpamon und waters, both proceeding t« isco for Seattle October 1
hax been atrendy pinnned. Oct®ber 1% their destinations without hindrance
the anniversary of the founding of | aft the seriape |
7 in 1858. The 1 1 Winner < the
nefling last night) C.G.M.M. fleet grounded the day be- lian Rove arrived Ocean
thatiks was given! fore in the Fraser i ked her-} ptember
and Mr, ries if off wit 5 Caress a ‘anadian Farry
or ur rene , The Pur ound Navigation Com or San Pedro Se
: pany's ferry Potlatch grounded or
" lar 2%, and worked. herself
cig egy baa | ut mage yesterda
of the Bay gasoline launch C. ar } Canadian Ranger | Panama
| ported adrift off Jordan River wit Canal for San Pedro, San Fran-
two on botrd,.was found by se&reh-|cieco. Seattle and Victoria Septem-
Sid boats yesterday and her oceu-} ber 2%
pants recovered unharmed by their) canadian Ptoneer arrived Antwerp
pertences, Mrs. 1. Edwards 4n4! thence Victorin September. 28
B
F ' z otge Vance, occupants of the boat ; :
MARINE NOTES b ees ee went - “ z" wre at ae Canadian Setgneur left Vancouver
had sp er four hor se ws
—— in the digabled jaunch. They were| for Quebec’ and Montreal October 3
Docking here at 6.20 1 LS a er i exhausted but otherwise unharme Canadian Voyageur left Vancouver
fay from Seattle th
Kaga Maru atayed the night her 4 brought by Bert nock,, Who Was]. @ypadian Trooper left Melbourne,
Kea—here—and—eloared—for—s wt = 4 washed-ashore-in-an-epen-beat-after} a jjattalla, for MICLOMA September 2
a.m,.to-day, when daylight ‘had Paes pe rowing six hours for ald for the| Canadian Inventor left Svdney, N
» ; I ' ' of e h wee ai ~.
made the passage of the Straits Iess A ) miles from meinbe party tf wt ; ad na @. for Victoria S ptember 24
of .a menaee—under the foggy condl- n Fr BCO,, Tr neouver | ee ceusela got under way! Canadian Scottish left Vancouver
. vailin payee i ; acs i ata Seusin ened nedae tradition ae ai Bosto nd. Montreal September
Ir MORE DEST RINEP i miles from Van ‘ generally yesterday evening and. this} al oston a 4
oe pat vy t 4 : SAN Lb | morning, The N.Y.K. Kaga Maru lay. 1 .
in 19 J yf the bushel They, Upion OH Company's tanker| CANADIAN MILDER, Victoria for | ee ee rnig deed: st out for sea} Canadimer Skirmisher arrived Van-
ge ; ’ oat Liocreer yenter} oe eget 8s , annel Rock 4¢-6.30 a.m. to-day, The La Plaéen | eouver Actoher 2
c t Saskateh t tequimalt inks last. n rt ance : k - naan
southbound miles from im Este ; ~ |epent the night at Eaquimalt after SUNRISE AND SUNSET
pe NIAGARA otorl miles | discharge there. The Vinémoor and mes
of Honoluty the Loch Goil, two other deep-ata
HOKKOH MARI obe 1,222) craft cleared for inland waters, pass-| Tims ‘of sunrise and -surimt (Pacific
cleared for Fraser River Mills | mies- from Tatoosh ink up to a letanaara tine) at Victor, B.C., for
am. to-day. She is a new mo- 1YO. MARI i und 27100 miles Incapite of the heavy foe and. the | the month of October 1925.
ship of the Walter Runciman in--from Victoria « | number of groundings Ittle real dam- } Sunrise Sunset
rests, London | STORVIKEN, for Vancouver, 1,105 | age has been occasioned by the thick
}
Canadian “oaste srrived San
Francisco the 4 ria October 1
‘anadian Tr sporter arrived Van
r October
I ) month were
picke« % tland stagion of
ithe Federal Telegraph « Conipany |
Wel yequieste?d Ataskan ‘stations to
get touch with the craft
her 8
same
The Ss. Vinemoor, completing 699,-
: fet of lumber here in the last two
Vancet
was cor
Gordon R
yesterda ‘ aving
without, wrives from: Vancouver weather of the last three days, The}
to Section 96 of tt
A The Hanna Nielson is expected to YOHEYAMA’:MARU, Japan for | lo86 of the Sea Monarch if the only
wan. fined _§! ec | ass _up from sea. for Fraser, River | Grayd Harber, F100. miles from Grays tineident of major daniage reperted on}
~ milla to-day, and- wae due atthe | qyaethoy j the coast, ft ts believed
CANADIAN BASie STEAM. | Race at 8 a.m _ Inbound to load } Octoher athe - Vancoiiver, Oct. 10.—the steamer|
HIP. I "Pia Reval Mall Steam Packet. mo- | ‘ ‘ ; eee 20) venon, ghich last night gank the tug
Steamer Prince Rupert will leave | torship Loch fi, after a_brief wait | hea Monarchy, n route from Port
Vancouver every Monday at & p.m Jin the Royal Roads yesterday, passed Townsend to Seattle, dropped: anehor
for Anyox, calling at. Powell River, | up to Vancouver to await the lfting of the fos before
Ocean Fatie and Prince Kopert. while ji: pools 12 wlles omen sing Lo -| pats fern She in ex-
‘the Prince orge Will l*ave Van Pushing her way through heavy] Diince |: stubert. Fidei ier here this afternoon
couver every Thursday at § pm. for; fog for the most part the. whaler} ince ype. omy:
, le $0.54; 48: smooth; § a.m AY e.
Stewart, calling at well River, | Brewn made port last night, return-| ;
Qeeés he Falla and Prince Rupert ling from Naden Harbor’ on. the close} ALA, due at Prince Rupert at. 8.1
Se—Prines John—will leave _Van~}of activities there. Five whalers of; um. outbound. ENS
the Whaling .! .
-ouver fortnightly for Queen Char Consolidated Com-
Sagi ana saassravtt chee ee ewes nee nee ALY j “mM FISHING cUNDAY
\Day ‘Hour Min ~Fiour Min.
miles; 2 ) moderate well
Pachent—-Purt cloudy; hazy; east
20.00; 40; light swell
Alert Bay-—-Overeast: calm WAR
+
[Aaaaaapanamnnaaaananada|
“CONTINENTAL LIMITED" toria Machinery Depot, to make way
tenves, Vancouver datiy- at 9.500" the Over. hauled out'tater. The} " J§ BEING OPPOSED
31
'
“ laeenurpudanaannanadannans
= lighthouss!
pm. for Montreal and other points tender tevan are also -xtongside,
East. All-steel equipment, Including | work proceeding on the sevéral ves-1 , Rome, Oct. 10.—The Catholic. Con |
jrawing_- m, compartment, I= | sein "The Fatevan ia tn” for botler | federation of Labor, known ax the —- TRANSPACIFIC MALS
brary, observatign car, with.radio,#* |repair; the Superior for general re-| “White Unton".to distinguish it from) In the.Provinclil Police Court ybs-
—— : = . poira after her grounding at. Min} the Roctat “Red” Uplon, has issued erday, where Stipendiary Magistrate
Cowichar Lake direct service.| hay and the Island Princess for in-!® maloment in "The Name of Christ-| George Jay heard eyidence,.-Ceapt October, 1925
motor coach from Point Ellice depot; —_— *jpmly protesis againat an agreement | “seiner” Zeballos, a fishing craft from. Spree ot—Rarsta Martie —ctcee
le
9.00 a.m, daly except Sunday. ~ ee" }- LIVESTOCK FAIR Ketween the industrialteta ana’ Fase- northern waters, was fined -$100- tor eer Ti jg pghokeghama Oct
- jat untors, It const 2 thls “on of..| using a purse seine net on Sunday, President Grante.Maile clore Oct. 1%;
Gulf Islands—Additional service to Vancouver, Oct-10 —December_18 / fence- against the right—and—dutyjcontrarytoe the act { p.om,; die at Yokohama Cet: 37> Shang-
Guit-islands, Charmer leave.Victorla} and 11 are ihe dates set for Van- Trhich-not-only-the working -but—al Capt, Pederson was taken inte ems. bat Now, 4 bHonghone Now &
Pil am. every Tuesday, calling. at] couver's livestock fair. tobe held at} citizens possess tn choosing the or-|tody by the Fisheries patrot steatm- Mensieue—Malls case Cet. Te 1 Boon;
Port Washington, Ganges ‘HarWor,| Hastings Park under the oe puis: o: pee oe to—which they —wieh—to | ship Malaspina Gn. Sunday October 4, BCS. 78 Gon
Mayne Island “and thence to Van-'the Vancouver Exhibition Associa- | entrustthe legitiinate protection of and Was Caught with Kin net down 29
' m,; due at Yokohama Nov, 1,
~pou ver. re . < 908 soot msieanuaecmee * : oavthelr economic and social-interests.” His boat, the Zeballos, was taken {ito Shanghai Noy,..A6,. Monghong Nov..,,19.
_Take Canrdian National “RauUwaya.| eidentet-work ide unen.onganige dons .of Lay. 1, Adolph... Pederdpn..owner of the China and Japan oto distinguish high water from. low |. ; Apply Whart ose
6.
Canadian Planter arrived Montreal
e Vord of the dr ing Taunch was for Sydney, Austra, September 17, |
: “Whe Meteorological Observatory, Gon-
d : zales Heights, Victoria |
} pre
|=
tween the two by apfriving on r fares, ete; appl ail Ratlwas and | o hiclagame
ps mat Agents o the Cana To Liverveoo!
| Thursdays and ‘sailing on Mondays | 4 isteuion fane.. 7 Hastings st. We N " c
fevery other week Fine Van r. BC.
| As the fleet is now definitely oF
| the Winter Ume there will be no fur . FROM QUEBEC
l ther Bunday sailings for the South; oar Fe biverpe
from this port The Admiral Line .
rest Will Make Ite terminus at Sr Fr
at hee is heretofore —three—vessels JOHN
touching here inbound and outbound 1 { Tee ire sive po
in the California run | a4 . np apc t Cher utg-Southamp-
Those new neighbors
aren't tiked v weit min _everywtiere er
} What's the trouble?” ~ ene — = | a “ye TYR, then Agt:
The woman pulls on alre and her CP.K. station, Vancenver,
| husband tries to whistle them.". Telephone Sermese 2630,
Se | ; Traffie Agents.
for
Bn Bang R, OCEAN VESSELS TO ARRIVE aaa
janapolis Mtled | 8 Agent From Due. - 8s. CARDENA, Gs. CATALA
. a vr . a Can.-Auist Alistralia,...Oct ot New Steamers to
OS K -&.. Orient Oct ALERT BAY, PORT HARCY,
O.8 1K Ortent Oe PRINCE RURERT. STEWART
2 YOR
RURTEIAR TG “at atkty Crate ‘core tach | tian note bahe Wael nai of HAM. : . the ateamahin Otter, “Aamaged ® OCEAN VESSELS To SAIL ; wickstechhd lntotmmatlon
Agent For. Departure UNION $s OF B.C, LIMITED
TK. 7 OMGKL...... Oat . ii Phone 1925. 1 Belmont Butiding
O8.K «sss Ortent Oct
CPR as Ortent Oct
Admiral-O Onient Oct
Can.-Aust Australia Oct
Rithets . Orient .O*8. 2 | BPUGET SOUND NAVIGATION CO.
President Madison—Mails close
30, 4 p.m; due at Yokohama Nov. 11, War | se ”
Shanghai } 16, Hongkong y . $
Austrailia and New Z 5 ‘ 7
i
_
Sonoma—-Malls clo: Oc -
due-at Sydtiey Nov er t , . 7 Leaves Victoria dally at 1046 am
Ningttra—Malis ciose Oct. 2 for Port Angeles, Dungeness, Port
* =), 3 Pp ; + ") :
due at Auckland Nov. §, Sydney Nov SPEC S Townsend. 6nd Seattle... skertwen
Ma) ha: Malla..claee Ney -a pwr: IAL ERVICE. Beattle ; Returning. leaves
yee at ellington Nov. 23, Sydney Nov On Fast Schedules eattiec | at midnigh arriving
To SHIP'S SIDE, HALIFAX Victoria 9.13" aum
| Ss i | Por Sailings of
| COASTWISE MOVEMENTS DORIC - AUTO FERRY
“PR. steamer Teayen dally, at 2.45 To LIVERPOQL, December | PUGET
~R. steamer leavesydally at 11.45
Sidney daily at 0.60 a.m it
Fes mec loes MEGANTIC. ipa tes; returning leaves Anacorte
R. steamer arrives at 7 a:m F
R. wtes ven ¢ . “eke of wank '
re ally at 3 p.m To LIVERPOOL and GLASGOW ) kets and information es on
A, steamer leaves dally at’ 4.30 December 13 E. E. BLACKWOOD, Agent
912 Government St Phone 7106
uc leaves daily at 10.1
3 15 am - Or H. S. HOWARD, Agent
From Seattle AS( ANIA C.P.R. Whart Phone 121
steamer arrives dai t 115
arrives daily at 9.30 a.m
ives daily at y To PLYMOUTH and LONDON
B.C. Coast Service:, From ° Victoria December 14
Oct, 6; 16, 27; Nov. 1 IT; Dec. 11 at
Simawnseoae, ell ATHENA || MILL BAY FERRY
_ West Coast Route
, coast Service: From \} To GLASGOW, December 14
enth and twenty-first
> Hopem UP- ISLAND POINTS :
Porttand Canal Route |
y Canadian National: ‘Thursdays from | pp ve Nevsier Aye i Oni Bay) j
ancouver at § pm. for Stewart , py
- a. h er 3 7.30 a.m 8.15 a.m
leaves Vancouver Mondays i To SOUTHAMPTON so an | 10.08 a.m
Steamships: Every Friday from} went ttc i a sop 3 ae rims
at 9 pr fo *rine tupert F ; 430 ;
wets: ex see, Prince Rupert, | ‘or Full Particulars and Infor- 2.00 p.m. 4.30 p.m
i Prince Rupert—-Route mation, ADpIY fis pm 615 eM,
11 Sie bhatt eae, Fy n | CITY TICKET OFFICE” Inf eotiaee Phone "5037 and
| Vancouver for Atert Bay, Port } ¥, 911 Government St. Tel. 1242 Keating 43M
| Prince Rupert, ete
| Catiadian = Nattonal
| Thursdays from Vancouv
i Auto Ferries
| Sidney-Anacortes—Puget Sound Navi.
| gation Compa s Puget leaves
9 ‘a.m, returning leaves Anacortes
p.m
| Mill Bay Ferry (hridging Taland High-
way: at Malahat) Leaves Verdier
Avenue, Rrentwood: 7.20 a.m,
411 am,, 1.40 p.m, 3 pm. and
Leaves Camp Point, Mill Bay,
10 a.m., 12 noon, 2.15 pom.
and 6.15 Lo m
“seuss __- Transcontinental
!TimeHt! Timelit’ Time Ht/TimeHt
Thom, tt.[h. m. ft/h. m, ftth, m. ft.
Leaves Daily at 9 p.m.
A through Train to Montreal
THROUGH SLEEPING ‘Can TO CHC
eee ee TO’ CHICAGO
Minneapolis & St. Paul
be samen te Palle oe towns Bo Aa pti B an
“TORONTO EX EXPRESS
Leaves Dally at 8.30 a.m;
From Cansdian Pacific Station cs
_
>
“hee
te tod
ae
$3
widama cies
Sansenae
SAO ee & &-1-1R wns
Be eee pe ap
=a ae ips
TAK ae euUss
TL hodk ht eek a
BAK onsen
Ce eee err SY)
Ames Om a)
eSt2 02 Po ta
aae-S
ee
aeae-
sessunese:
ormsees—-=>-
FASURAH:
1 Ona t= 9,
ee
be pee —
oe Up ime og 9 ot
Sa anauce
| priaisterseo =
Sau
3
6)
9|
1
3)
The time used is Pacific wander, . tor
he 120th Meridian west. It. tn counted
rom 0 to 24 hours, ‘from midnight to!/, “oll tor
midnight. The figures for height serve ee Laws
c or ‘ oH
“enter Where Biknks occur In the table. erat ee
the tide rises or falls continuously ' ' — ~
during two successive tidal periods
l withont turning
|The height is ti feerand tenths ever}
foot, -mensured from the "average Tevet
7a Liwar low water
Esquinialt.--To find the depth of poy
on the sill of the Gry dock at any tide,
add 189 feet to the height of gah |
water as above given, Fg ay
= o De 2 radiator filler cap while the. water is bottom of the rim- Next put on ba 4
NE W FORD M( DEL | NEW SALES MANAGER Care Shania be Bite ort oy Me i op ana OTE Should be Used 1s a eae ena | Ye and Spark
Used to ‘Escape run-the metor at a speed that. would ts opposite <
Ri e each other until a Ti I
take you along the road at Bbout « ~ In Mounting TM eentie pressure is required; then 50 | iming | mportant
7 % AY ld F C 30-mile-an-hour clip. After four | around oe rim_a bined of times, |
r t ca s rom ar See nana hy fe sage ha bs 3 bytes When using demountable sims, care aoe ae " Laat > Ss en eS How to tell whether the car is
may put Shore, cold water in the must be exercised to have the Fita | ~— timed too late or too early is not
2 oO > o t
“The best of automobiles will boll radiator | if necssary.” and tire true on the wheel, for if the!
1 tei ts binced of the wheel bo us to iF lli aaa sal }o difficult task. There are two kinds
ee eee A bg pe pe itd ne glide: Pte RL noe the tire will wear! 1 ing niversa jof timing; the timing of the yalves
' ust the same as the beat of us iy “ | Tt
‘ . hnlt aver” 2 4: 4 R di E bl | qulokly In order to have the de- J Hi Gi hand the timing of the spark The
First Model Now on Display in National Motor Com-| iP satan oy Se ab | Ml ercene —_-, rei e eatecapeg te | 4 MES, Sats, Gen ee ae se a
_ pany’s Showrooms; Much Interest Being Taken in balernke CorCompsy ay sau a ‘of riuge| Tn fiiting —utlveraal Jotnte” it in| valves, “Timing pt Cie spark. ts tur
Improved Car by Local Motorists; Improvements et , motor care to thellmit fail to-givs| ~Bome car ownerd are-Wore juatl?| The way to PUC ORs tim I ‘ts f01-| Ween the Ghd grece pearts 4c were|Yaivs will wot Sbnane, te te Citer>
Include Re-designed Top, Gas Tank Under Cowl, to tar top ob e Hsp ht 6 tid gp | ile sae adaegaeee wee rs | sagt Oh canna the ite ad Goss ignod eines Asdshosta’ Cal "Whee the ectins cones” te’ Sees
J } t sandpaper all rust from the rim eat mac thinned down and should be. When the engine ceases to knock
¥ q vy a o ¥ © € € inks v|
Double Ventilating Windshield, Lowet Seats, New). csi on the desert or any strain which] of—radiator “tx “the — determining
falloe band; then turn the wheel so} forced out It is better. to refill, after an excess of gas ia fed.on-an
causes the motor to jet so hot that} tactor Generally. akine. in hon- | thatthe valve stenr Hole {s on top: | untversal joints than simply_to add} uperade‘ with the spark fully ad-
Tire v the water ‘starts bolligg) be very} eyeopib radiator -wil-aftind tor few- | then lift the top-of the rim on to the lubricant > The greane forced out,| vanced, the spark ‘tintfne has become
Carrier and Nickel Sead Lamp Rims. careful. how you cool it (off. .Care} er decorations thin the tubular type |* heel, iheerting the valve stem in tts however, should be wiped off, par- } retarded at the distributor, if the
i x, aoe 5 should be used for several reasons,| In the letter. the. bend. of the final hele-and,-when eatistiedsthat-the lug} Ucularly where a_ propeller shaft! ongine knocks too much, and when
the most important of which is your| does not do much harw Nor prs ay the valve stem-and on the in brake ts used Excess grease ts-apt}-the—spark ia retarded, the timing
First of “the improved Ford ears to reach. Vi ictoria is & demon 7 « own safety, Tt is impossible to avoid} a leak resuit if the shafts of the em | side of the rim will fall perly. into] to fly off and lodge on the brake} in too far advenced, assuming that
i -
scakting yourself tf you take off the! blem devices cut the fins a littt its hole on the falloe, “s ‘ the] band of this type of brake. the engine is free of carbon, .
strator model now being shown by the National Motor Company at :
their showrooms on Yates Street. Large tiumbers of interested
prospects have visited the showtooms this Week, studying the im-
proved touring car on display.
wil
|
/
An all-steel body on the improved chassis, with a new—tep de-|
signed to harmonize with thé reduction in height, gives the touring |
cara grace and smartness héretofore unapproached. Advance in|
eomfort-have kept pace with the improvements in design: — Placing}
the fuel tank under the cowl has*made it possible to lower the seats,
giving greater leg-room and added
comfort for driver and passengers. | finish, all-ateel body, redesigned top
Ventilation and. driving . vision dre} gas-tank--under cowl, new- side cur- . rn “7 :
improved by tie new touriig: wind~ | tains which “open -with the door,
shield, the lower hatf of which. is [double ventilating: ivi dq, lower
adjustable The side curtains re-| sents dnd steering . new Ure 0. H. BELL -
designed to conform to body and top | carrier ckel headlamp rims and 2 - :
changes, add the final d t
of tour- | windshield -wiper newly appointed sales manager
ing comfort the National Motor Comps
P : a a
When in' place, the curtains open COUPE - agents for the Ford Motor Compar
with the doors and. —combine--wide The. improved coupe,. sa lower,
= ve... Av ¥ p-bie bas bean-asseciated. with the Fund
Vision with: Jasting durability, Here |foomier car, with Interior refine
Company for the past seven
are the improvements made in the|™ents and an outward appearance i ane time
| ; 6
touring car Black baked-ename| , tat vewpeaks the really fine AUtO~ | onion in Penticton Nat ; *
mobile. The all-steel body, finished | \,...,- Company h - = ‘.
— = in dark blue with nickel radiator, | 2.4 increase. in ; n ’ : "
shell and lamp rims, has given the ast two month “ sokir ”
motoring world a car’ of rare dis- . . dannes ® |
Unction The seats and steering
s column are.lower, providing a ee ee ee
iator room for (the -iegs and an easier trite? teel of double venti
' \raing position: The front piriars batting Windent Wesigret top. 4 F
i
are narrower, reducing the possl- | sj le eurtalr which open with
| eke
}
bilit of “blind speéets.” The doors rs cas tank under
R s d are wider. There is ai one-piece | toy seats and gtrering
" windshield, which, with the cow } rea eck ire
epaired jem ee ee Se os ae
- eoniveal,_™A—parccel_panel_ts provided | oii wiper
within the car, and the rear deck TUDOR SEDAN
has been redesigned affording : . ,
an greater luggage space. Improve- he new, all-stee! bod) wer as N
ments In the coupe are as follows onger, gives the Tudor sedan a fas
. Dark - blue finish, black ename}|c/nating appearance that wi ¢
chassis, nickel radiator and lamp commend it to thenfaatidious motor- |
ecore rims, one-piece——windahield, rear | ‘st All seats have been redesigned
view mirror, windshield wiper, gas |®@4ing to the comfort of driver and 2
: }
tank under cowl, larger rear deck, | Passengers. The new one-piece
new tire carrier and dash lamp. windshield combines wider -vision
1 andimproved weather protection,
RUNABOUT with fdeal ventilation contro! for all . e]
The runabout model is one of the | seasons. The body ts finished In a
most notable body types among the | beautiful dark blue, with nickel! .
improved Ford cara. The body is for, shell and headlamp rim
ali-steel, with low sweeping lines | ar the chassis in. black Improve
hat give the car a sportive, zestfui | ments on the r Sedan are
. Te tiateEwires for titan tremendous bark bite body binek-omamet- run. ; : _ j \. : = S
popularity. With the new wind- j ning <. gear, all-steel body xe ae-plece
shield, ventilating in the lower half, | ¥ ndahi ‘ rear-view mirror, gas!
Auto Radiator, Body snd the dropped rip Be g column andj|tank u cowl, windshield wiper, p
Fender Specialists greater roominéss, the comfort of i radjat and lamp rims, new
ithis car matches its outward appeal. | tire carrier and dash light
1901 GOVERNMENT STREET |) Both utility and gomfort have }
been | FORDOR SEDAN
PHONE 2287 served in enlargifig the rear deck
“ compartment Runabout improve
ments include: Black enamel, baked |
First impression of the . improv
r Sedan ‘will ‘be he grace
and engaging amartnesa
redesigning the
ek A |e ethene ec Non-Detonatin
intments, 1
1 instrument boa
la Tuxury te Ne expected of
sxpenn © cars. and refiect
ACCESSORIES \ DEALERS | good’ taste, improvement in .the
| | Fo r Sedan are; Dark grey finish
| black ehamel ri ng gear nickel
Phones 659.669 1000 Dougsas ‘ Ve , ;
{Yadiator and lar rims, improved
Vi to ia’ : BEGG MOTOR Co. Ltd. Linatrument— board, ©. seata_and}
1ctoria $ = +} 935 View Street Phone 2058 } | steering column, -rear-view™ mirror, | :
Modern Service Station i | windshield. wiper, new tire carrter
i‘ a : Distributors jana new sun visor
iT
Tiree’ btorags Batteries NASH, CHEVROLET AND
Weiler Auto Supply House CADILLAC P Clean Strainer i m ;
AUTO TOPS | Vacuum Regularly , é
. .
Automotive Equipment Te tilght“aive “been” all Hebtto 6
fallow the strainer in the vacuum
House tank intake -to-go for montha with-
ACCESSORIES rt out attention, but nowadays the
Shelli Gasoline, Oils, Tires, BGatte | »"4* wise owner cleans it out every two}
Charging, Vulcanizing ey. ; AUTO TOPS—REPAIRS weeks regularly. It isn't so much é&
768 Yates (Opposite Dominion Hotel) that everyone is using more gasc~}
' Phone 394 928 Johnson St. Phone 4933
line as the fact that more stops
: at fijling stations mean more’ scale!
DEALERS GARAGE AND REPAIRS from gas pump hoses |and more
metal chips from the nozzle which |
careless employees customarily_jam
4901 — PHONE -— 4901 E V WwW I L LI 7 M s into the nec ke of the gas tank. |
= Fora Service }!] “4. AUTO nePAIR sHoP Adjusting Drain |
€ ) ° .
National Motor Co. Ltd. | Sie tM as Mabry Plug is Essential | . | nion Oil C ompany
If there -ts one.place where too
much elbow greases is fatal it is at!
Y
: -8 e
- the crankcase drain plug. If the!
| = ;
: [plug is turned too tight the whole!
A. E. Humphries Motors Lid. Louie Nelson’s Garage neck of the draining section will |
Dealers for Vancouver Island ‘in Fora aiie em Be Bn aeheen come loose from the crankcase Itself : }
b . | Not only will: successive removals
BROTHERS M ae SRS O86 Ore, : Lot the plug require ‘two wrenches)
sa anes-“Wereet ie a LOUIE NELSON and much alinoyance, but a bad ofl!
: ates Stre one - vi Teak ie likely to start at this point, |
VICTORIA, B.C. = pees ae Streets T) Should anything of this nature hap-}
pen, the case can be dropped and
| the plug holders soldered into place
REDDING &
" WupsoN suren aix ano || REDDING & McQUADE 75 Per Cent of Head
GARAGE
A. W. C A R T E R Sorkay of Dewiitee and Discovery Lights Dangerous
Dealer 615 Courtney Street Phone 2254—! ts 6606
Phone 846 . si Wigiis aN As the result of a study conducted
: by the bureau of standards in which
AUTO LIVERY the American Automobile Associa-
tom end various cagthetring ‘bodies At Union Oil Service Stations and Independent Dealers
Fz ; " ] | ascertained that_nearly seventy-five a OS : oe ec ee : 7 = -~ Y
SAMESON MOTOR LTD.) — DRIVE” YOURSELF |} se" fessor . : of the First Class Everywheré
would throw a troublesome amount ‘ zi ts “+
STUDEBAKER MoTOR: CARS of light in the eyes of an approach. :
; ‘ . <2 ing dtiver on @ level road. The aaa
SALES , SERVICE i bureau tested 400 care of fifty-eight :
740 Broughton Street—Phone 2248 _} | diferent makes and with forty- ~saen
different makes ‘of headlighting
vices,
ASN LBS
«cane Hehe 1 FERGAL {Remeron (OI A NE
+
1
Sot eate ae ty
~ MILUON MOTORS |Henry Ford Makes
Zi ~ MADE IN CANADA $6,132,327 in Year
From Canada Pl
That over a million motor vehicles oe
have beeh manufactured to date in Toronto, Oct. 10—Profits
anada is one of many interesting y ) .
facts relating to the automobile. in- of Ford Motor Company of
org | contained in a booklet. “Facts || Canada for the year ender
and Figures of the Automobile In- |] July 31, 1925, was $6,132,327
dustry in Canada.” recently published * 1 a eh oP $6,132,327,
by the Automotive Industries of Can- |} after deduction of all charges
ada, the trade association of manu-j} for manufacturing, -selling
_and . general _ éxpenses,. .in-
élading depreciation and
facturers of motor vehicles, tires,
Parts and acoesseries in this countre. |
rorr=""Automobile manufacturing has ;
taxes. Last year profits were
$3,719,187. The Canadian fac-
tory gives a much higher
been carried on in Canada contin-
ously for just twenty-one years.
profit per car thar the Ameri-
ean plant.
=
Pt eee A ah Rote Ls arcs
tp
VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925 a= ae 5 mie aE.
RADIO CLUB HAS ‘SECOND PACIFIC SA ay MARCONI SEES |
weakest. Mr. Rice took him in
er ; “Two cigurs were made f
- PROGRAMME VIGTOR: ing a puff until they were gone. .
i Three doctors, Mr. Ricé, Dick and }
later an egg apiece, Next 4 Peraad
* hydroplanes .and a battleship ar- ANCIENT = IFT
eann ke eae ee r . = —" ee his men were taken to Honoluhi.” | : ;
Night Birds to Entertain Big Mme.~Schumann-Heink and), Naval authorities stated to-day |
Display of Radio Novelties | Marcel Journet to Sing at found avous 115) pm. Hawaildn’ Prehistoric Girt Was First.
Pacific Coast. City editors of San! Radio Transmitter; Used a
at the Crystal Garden on_-Octo’ pr 22, |
Sat Oe ee eva crean, LRCnoniiae Schumann-Heink, . world- |‘Corporation's, stations by wireless, |
famous operatic and concert con-|about 7 o'clock. Presses roared, ex-|
made to the executive committee of |} England Senatore Marcon! confessed
thé Victofla Radio Club on Thiurs- jto “being at times amused at the
grand opera, will sing for the yadie| been clipped from a newsfaper and
read before a KGO microphone, to
the
his
Fortunately the modern automobile, if given reasonable care does
fot give a eS ee However, trouble does Sccir stca-””
sionally and some figures compiled recently analyzing the causes of
breakdowns give some facts which are of great interest to the average
automobile owner.
Ignition trouble heads the list and is responsible for 18 troubles’
out of every 100. One reason for this high percentage is the fact that
very often the ignition is suspected of being the cause of a stoppage
and is tinkered with. When. this happens the percesitage of ignition
troubles is increased, for very often inexpert adjusting will put a per-
fectly good ignition system out of action. There are a few very simple
tests tat will qiuckly show if the trouble actually DOES lie in the
Ignition of +not and-these tests should always be made before you
start trying to make any adjustments.
‘en years ago the industry assumed /
Berge proportions, and to-day it
@tandg in the front rank of the Dom-
inion’s igdustrial enterprises
More. than 100,000 Canadians are
Bow employed in relation to the in-
@ustry and. its products, and over
$00,000 persons in Canada are de-
Pendent on the manufacture and use
of motor yehicles
There are only two countries in the
4
the type of non-skid chain which |
may be used ,by automobile, truck..or
bus, umost Motor vehicle legislation
recognizes that chains are necessary
three days, Commander Rodg
Paul, bathed and fed the men, First
that Rodgers and his crew were
The Radio bit held KFI Los Angeles
xp Francisco newspapers received their | +3 .
Smile, Says Wizard
over the successful venture organ- ——
tralto,.and Marcel Journet, the great- | tray appeared in the streeta, arid
day evening. discussions which occasionally. take
cageand drove to the hote}.”"*
last
eri cord
Mr. Rice, each man of the crew Yak-,
FOR EXHIBITION 10 MORROW EVENIN int ms apices Neat guy tre
-
ae etm ; t= = “+ vived=-and-commanmir Rodeirs and
found abouts 415 p.m, Hawailin
Exhibition to b;
22
Los Angeles, Oct. 10.—Madame ) flash, which came from the Radio
®
ized Jast Spring, according to reports In a recent address in London,
est French basso now singing inj within a few minutes the story had
place aseto who is the real inventor
The commitiee met in the studio
World—the United Statés and Great
Britain—in which a greater number
of motor vehicles are owned than in
Canada, while in proportion to-pop-
vlation—one car te every. fourteen
*persons—the Dominion of Canada
rénks next to-the-{nited States.
In Vatue of Canatiap-products of
ali classes the automobile industry
stands seventh, At the top naturally
are. the agricultural—products, first
for the safety of life and sromeety |
and should be used “when_ roads,
streets and highwa are slippery
because of rain, s ice, oil or
manner.ef- construction."
A— provision “Incorporated” in new
leg ton—before the last session of}
the Colorado state legistature mak-
jing the use of chains compulsory on/
wet roads and pavements- Wig fost
BECAUSE GF Opposition to other por-|
being flour am? grist mill products,
then pulp and paper; third, meat pro-
ducts and so on. Tt-is interesting to
note, hawever, that while the indus-
the
of sugar ye
the result
recently
at
been
power of
wf their
is intended
ao iner
an
same tt precision t
ef brake
expensive
it
time
too to
buy, hundred
doll
yout since
y i
in ars
that tests
machir on irs
pooradiusime nt
whether equipped wit!
four-wheel brakes, have the
well ad) that the»
come within 5 r cont of
what might
adjustment
ain
our
twenty
elght
}trest—brekes aration
}and few
1924 the Federal Gov- | two or
ected $32.000,000 in cus brakes
sales and taxes |
parts ines,
$24
kinds
1 in tw
int, or
annum
customs
revenue
s tothe
ears.
so sted
exciae
and ef
es a
re ted
example a ofr
well-known ma
brakes stopped
» an hour in
feet. After making —adjust-
ments as Indicated by this machine
the stopping distance at this speed
was reduced fo seventeen feé@t
One of the .ot oa why few
cars have an ‘ad At is any
where near perfec the ffienlty
THY ROTI THe Teer ere
that t grip with equa
r ks ina
two
wheel
us ale
te rif from
vehicle twenty
10,000
for
net
ace
per
00
yor ts,
MUA
|
|
}
|
a
Motor vehicle commissioners agree
of non-skit” Chains will be required
try stands seventh in total value of |as a safety measure under certain
of exports, being ‘surpassed only hy | flers are now specified. Their use
Brain and grain products, pulp and,|!8 now optional but several states
prodicts. All of these three are | clude data on the use o8 chains in
Specially related to Canada’s natural | their reports of all fatal and non
has taken-piace in export business of | ee
the motor industry is remarkable in
ages for manufacture due—iw-_aveit- TESTING ARAKES
ability of necessary raw hateriate '
white ‘foe & number of years imports }
of motor vehiclés were large, Canada |}
Motor cars as Have Been Imported
and this tendency should continue =
ffs er nterestine facet that so, OC sour rakes ae at
centa to-day will purchase as m can weigh a. pound
is the more remarkable in that prices|A machine pias just
of other manufactured goods, many | developed to test
facture, have in t In fact, it
that it takes on $ stations, and
purchased for 8} in +623: This re aciusiment
duction of sale price of motor vehicles for a motorist
by tremendous efficter m
facture and by mass production
When prices of o rmmeoditic
advanced
In 1923 an
toms duties
on motor vehici
000,000 in
total of $56.000.000 ‘«
an average of $28
Allowing $3,000
of $25,000,000
Dominion,
however, -that befoce long the - use
Production, it stands fourth-in’ valve | conditions as horns, lights and muf-
paper products and wood and wood | !mcluding Indiana and New. York in
resources, and the development that | [tal accidents
that Canada ‘has no special advant-
It is also interesting to npte that
has now expdrted twice as many t
more and more marked in the future if you could me
Motor car as $1 would in 1913. Thi | might be surprised
of which dre used in motor car mar brakes and the accuracy
purchase the a as and redu
and of tires has been brought at costs, several
has been accomplished " \
Tat vessteatity ond alneet TH ee dls
ernment cc
while the J
years on motor
drawback on ex]
from motor vehi
in ivinces,
anada
FEWACCESSORIES
RECOGNIZED BY LAW.
AL TYPES OF BRAKES
NT WHEEL BONE
affected t
wheels
except
two-wheel sys
a, four -System
Juced
r accord
“shirkage.”
“Non-askid chains
lights, muffler
rors for amerciz
only automobile
nized by recen
state motor
to a recent s
Despite 4 n
isclosed | by
served that inte
all the legislation
is In harmony with
fic
the Hoover. ©
Highway Safe
The necessity
braking power for
cognized and
state codes
few except
ge head
ers Several stat
B- the use.of th
in respect to pedestrians
from the rear
The rear view mir
device on all mim
particularly trucks. pow enfoys
fictal-starnd! is Ries
by es
re
horns
mir
the
s at view
re
es
the
odes
recog
various |
according |
vehicle
phraseology
is ot
the
unc
of
ne
the
the
| flexing
operated
springs
hyd
principles
nha the t
rok
tires to
to legial
nference on Street and —
pressed air
When test
the wheels
to stdé the
Just lock the wheels for an instant
and then examine the paving. Both
tires should make the saine
of mark on the pay
that the adjustments ar
If the brakes’ do
with the first preasio
pedal, do not keep pushing
Release pedal and tr again
vigorously It frequently a
iifference-whieh— can only ex=
piained by analysis of the particular
brake assembly and the conditions
re ¢
il x
covered f
“ case tha
of .reguiat-
lights and muf-
. codes elaborate
particularly |
approached [
in| akes see |
s re-
at jards
. is not essary
a complete
ely_by stop
tre
tatutes
horn
net
ror as safety |
icles, |
of-
required
a
ve
on
reial more
makea
tre
placed
It is with a sense of pleasure and pride that we invite the
motoring public to visit and inspect our
NEW HOME AT 845 YATES ST.
You will see that we have faith in Victoria and her growth.
In our showrooms. you will find the
Hudson, Essex and Marmon
“——Cars on Display ~
And be sure and see our guaranteed Used Car Bargains:
You will find w well-equipped repair shop with modern
“appliances and a well-appointed storage department with
facilities to handle-your. neéds in gas, oils and accessories. -
Bring in your car now for washing and polishing, “We
guarantee satisfaction.
DINSMORE BROS...
845- Yates Btreet Phone 144
som a
. power |
rately “as" yor tT
It_-ts
© equipped with |
length j
ij tain.
tions ef the new motor vehicle code. |
TINKERING CAUSES
MANY TROUBLES
To test the:ignition, first turn
on the ignition switch and discdn-
nect one of the wires from a spark
plug, then, while holding the end of
the wire about '4".away: from any
metal part of the engine, have some-
one press down the starter switch
to turn over the engine. lf you notice
a spark passing from the end of the
wire you are holding, you. can be
fairly certain that the trouble does
not lie in the Distributor or battery.
If you find that no spark passes
when this test is made, then it
shows the trolble lies in the Igni-
tion: distributor or some of its con-
nections.
In most cases defective spark plugs are responsible for iftition
trouble and these should be removed and inspected before any other
part of the Ignition System: is touched.
Rear. axle shafts are responsible for the next highest percentage
of breakdowns, 13 out of every
jected to terrific strain. This-st
D0.- The rear axle shafts are sub-
in.is especially severe when turning
corners sharply and when going over very rough. roads.
the axle shafts support the whole of the weight of the rear of -the car
Remember }
}
Overloading is another reason why axle shafts sometimes break and
leave you stranded on the road a
long way from home. If you wish
to avoid trouble with this-part-of your-car, slow-up_when going around
corners, do not overload atid drive carefully over rough roads.
Wheels and springs come next-with a percentage of 7%
less dtiving=Sver rough roads—and failure to keep the spring clips
tightened up are the cause of most of the trouble
Wheels should be examined occasionally to see that
Care-
ith the springs.
ere is no exces-
§
sive play in the wheels bearings and that lugs on detachable rims dre
tight.
out of every 100 breakdowns
Keep all steerin
Front axles and steering gear are each responsible for about 6
Lack «
replace Worn parts are the cause of most of the troubles in these parts
wear and front axle connections well lubricated and
f lubrication ard neglect to
you will probably never experience any trouble whatever with these
parts.
Lubrication accounts
to see that there is sufficie
xi] or failure to drain o
af all automobile breakdowns.
perfect |
Strange as it may seem, the
by dirt or water in the gasoline
line system now and again and
bottom of the tank about once every two or three months and you
will find that most of ‘your carburetor trouble will disappear.
Copyright, 1925, by S. N. L. Technical Syndicat
OVERLAND COMPANY
BUILDING NEW TAX!
Of interest
mercial field the an
jot Willys-¢ erland of a new model
| Willys-Kaoight taxicab which incor-
horates. some unusual features.
The
has
to the
is
taxi nd com
reement
new
many
cab,
essential
of ites
8 well as
now in
fea
a
production,
ires toward
nnd pas.
the comfort
sengers
| tuenta ove
| styles
ver
several. improve
the former model. Three
listed in the new cab,
| known a# models F, G-and H for the
| three-door limousin four-door
| Umousine an three-door landaulet,
| respectively
are
Taxicab de ra who have seen the
new cab declare it to be an example
J of the finest cdach work ever placed
lin any taxicav. Among the many im-
included a lower and
brated body, fashion
windows at the rear of
which replace the
ritek a radiator bar
cap. which is monogrammed and 4I-
lurninated A heavy, nickeled front
bumper is standard equipment onthe
new car which has nickeled barrel
head lamps and bullet cowl lighta as
well as knight-head pillxr lamps and
monegrammed stoplight.
The interior of the new Willys-
Knight cab has been made larger, it
being possible to seat six pas-
; Sengera in comfort Heavy, twelve-
gauge sheet steel fenders and heavier
running board with four nickeled
| kick plates and much to the rigidity
of the body parts.
Snubbers as standard equipment
on the new car, insure easy riding
qualities, while heavier and larger
brakes add to the safety features of.
j the car.
The steering ratio of the new cab
Was been Increased from 9% te 1 to
11% to 1, Insuring greater ease of
handling. In addition, two other
improvements include the placing of
gasoline gauge and speedometer on
the Instrument board to the right_of
|} the driver's seat
j provements ar
more strongly
curved
sider
shutters
€
ably
the
steel
| now
Measuring F font
Wheels is Soli
Many car ownere do not take the
trouble_to see whether their front
t wheels are in proper alignment be-
cause they have no cosfveniefit means
lof measuring distance betweenthe
wheels. They may know that the
fronts of, the front wheels should
be closer together than their rears,
Tput it is @ difficult thing to measupe
accurately, and alignment is an ac-
curate matter.
A Yanty solution to this problem
fe to use a convenient two-sec-
tteon-curtain-rod-such ar any tntine-
| wife uses to hang up a lace cur-
: Side this rod-in-or outwit
it fits the respective spaces and then
“the distance from ore of
\
|
its ends to the other.
for 6 out of every
t oil in
the old-o#l every 500 or 600 miles, are the
principal causes_of lubrication troubles J .
Universal Joints and Propeller shafts are the cause of about 5%
Universal Joint troubles are nearly
always caused by failure to keep them properly- lubricated.
about 34% of all automobile troubles, and most of this 344% is caused
former |
| interruptions by
100 breakdowns
the crankcase
Failure
use of wrong grade
:
|
Carburetor is responsible for only
Clear out the strainers in the gaso
draw off some gasoline from the
ELECTRIC WAVES
COST 100 MUCH
TOBE WASTED
} improved
lvets which won prizes at the Spring
| show will not be eligible for. awards
Marconi Expects Economies |
| to Result From New Beam
Stations
| (London, Eng Electric
waves far too valuable to be al
| Ways broadeast.in all directions, ¢*
| pee ally when ie « ed to com
| tnunicate with perticular
place or sald Senatore Gug-
Helmo Marcont, in inaugurating tne
radio exposition” here
For th reason,” continued the
l great inventor the beam station be-
ing erected for communication. be-
tween Britain, Canada, Australia, In-
a and Seuth Africa are likely to
provide what might almost he Gon-
sidered a new method of communica-
tion destined to fill a position of the
test Importance for cheapening
eOMMUNnieation throughtut the
world.”
"Telephonic broadcasting,”
nued
it
only
4
he con-
“Ie rapidly becoming a neces-
sity in every civilized country as f
potent means of disseminating in-
structions, information and enter-
tainment
“We should not, however
what radio haw done for many yveara
for Commercial telegraphic communt-
cations; the important part it play
tin the Great War, and, above ull,
in diminishing the perils of maviqa-
tion and 34 the saving of life at 14:
“But the art of radio-cognmunica-
tion ts now undergoing a complete
process. of evolution.”
pee Door
F orm of Hazard |
All experts itn automobile safety
pre agreed that the door of the car!
{s a common form of hazard. There}
are two principal things which hap-
“pen i Conrrectton with the” wiles
of doors. The. door ts left open
when it ought to be shut, projects
over the runnite bourd gets th the
way of an oncoming car or knocks/|
somebody down. Again, {t- ts a
habit to slam automobile doors; no-
body knows why. But the habit
leads “to™-many pedpie being hurt.
Old Spark Plugs =
Many car ownéra are discovering
that any old spark plug will not do}
for their engifes. Tho plugs must!
be, not_only good, but of: the right
wine. This latter point is ‘more
than « matter of outward .
ant nd thread size. Hf the points
of the. plugs extend too far tnto the
combustion “chamber of the cytin-=
ders they will become overheated
and -will cause. pre-ignition-—knock-
ing—and spark failure.
forget
retary
of Radio ‘Station CFCT. and found
a)
that sphce would probably be at
premium, applications for stands be-
ing received from all the local radio
dealers, and many Vancouver con-
cerns. m.
MUSICAL --PROGRAMMES -~
The entertainment programme up-
der Préparation wih ho of great in-
terest te-the visitors. A concert plat-
form will be constructed, at one end
of the large banguetting natt—or the
Crystal Garden, to accommodate the
jartiste at the various performances.
On Thursday evening, the opening
night, the members of Stotker’s Re
lable Order of Nightbirds will pro-
vide a programme, and will be
broadcast. from the hall by Station
‘FCT. On Friday evening there ‘will
an orchestral and vocal’ concert,
and special preparations are being
made for the clising entertainment
on Saturday evening
FINE PRIZES <
The freedom with whieh donations
are being..made to thé prise list
by radio-firma, is Ulustrated by re-
ceipt from the National. Company of
Browning-Drake kit, forwarded fs
soon as advised of the tmpend
éxhibition. The Hadio Club has :
cated thie award as the first. pr
for converted sifiglt Circuit sets
special has been established
home constructed Browning -
Drake Fecateere,— for which 2 tine
prise whi set aside
NOVEL RECEPTION
The Radio Club is now experiment,
ing with a multiple Joud speaker
instalation — for at the exhibi
tion If te fultil theoretical ca
culations to” the -exhibition
will be entertained with 45
trom Oakand, Denver,
cieco and other points,
down-town distortion and “howler”
location of the
miles from the
It operdted
by K Moffatt, Victoria ploneer
broadcaster, who bas originated the
Propoent-urht-te-confitent of thes
fess of the novelty
ENTRY FORMS READY
Entry
rs wi
on
class
for
be
use
visitors
San” Franz
freed from
elver several
G
G
away
‘ryetal rdet will be
forms for
1 be available
Monday
tn
amateur
at all
morning
important particulars
en
at the coming exhibition
‘RADIO CONFERENCE
}
TO LOOK INTO NEED
FOR RESTRICTIONS
Washington Discussions to
Centre on Power and Num-
bers of Stations
Washington, D.C. Oct
the outstanding feat
forthcoming radio cor ence to be
held in this city und the auspices
of the department of commerce will
be the development of ideas as to
the number of broadcasting stations
which should be licensed, according
to Secretary Herbert Hoover Mr
Hoover ia anxious to get the reaction
of radio fans, broadcasters and man
ufacturers on this point The sec-
retary is not ware, he “has stated,
whether legisiation...will_ be needed
along these lines whether a co
operative plan can be worked out
such as has been in effect during
the past two or three years
At the prevent-time there are close
to 600 radio broadcasting stations
in this country and more than 100
are In prospect
Secretary Hoover. fotiowing
recent high-power tests of WGY, has
expressed himself as feeling that
there was a great improvement in the
troadcasting and that no harm had
been done He gave this as the
result of his own! experience and
that of many who have rent letters
to. hia department about the testa.
Radio experta. reported to the sec-
that there waa no «reat im-
provement tn the fading. Mr. Hoovw-
er sald that the majority of the
communications received by the de-
partment showed that the increased
power-aliowed a wider_range of dis-
tribution and no reports of interfer-
ence were made
ALL FANS GAIN
The changed attitude of the de-
partment 6f commerce is reflected in
the fact ‘that several
have been received and granted re-
cently for the material increasing
of broadcasting power to from 3,500
to 6,000 watts
A year 4r so ago officials of the
department were not at 41! anxious
ter Egrant efor thigh pow
ered stations. In Meht, however of
the experiments which have been
carited on irri the pret tee
months and the fact that little ~f
any local Interference resulted, bas
made the officta's realize that the
high-powered stations will be bene-
fictal In the lone run to’ th® latener
AWAITS EXPERT
While no date for the fourth radio
conference has been’ set by Secretary
of Commerce Hoover, there is a gen-
eral impression that the conference
will be held the latter part of Oc-
tober or early in November,
qThe setting of the date for the
conference depends almost entirely
upon the return-to the Tite? Sie
of William Terrell, chief of the radio
nection-of the department. of- com
meree, and Representative Wal‘ace
White of Maine, sponsor of ihe iany,
times tabled radio bill.
4
10
~
One of
of —the
or
the
be heard instantly in far away
Kaual. By the time the submarine
towed the disabled plane fifteen | inventor tadio existed- when pre-
: miles the news was received en’ the | historic man first understood or felt
! o Island over radio and the people of | the meaning of a smile of encourage -
Lihue were at the wharf to assist | ment ffom the prehistoric girl, when
in_ thé landing. pbaman beings first succeeded In talk-,
_ : ; fhe te -each . other were able 19.
understand” of decipher Sighats”
signe ade to them from a distance,
What I think L-did discoyer is that
of radio.”
To my mind” declared the great
!
’
:
the
! os
grammes |
Fe-
|
exhibi-!
radio |
Unless |
applic ations}
i: SRT
oo 9 Ua
(ay ETENCT AUNTS
Als, Ry. 4 WOK Chicago Pioneers High
a Power Low Wave Broad-
casting
Chiengo, Oct
teat of the
Va velength
% Sincering
carrying power of
of 217.3 meters.
| tts full utherized pow
watts, was condueted ‘last
Radio Station WOK, Chicago
Radio fans™through the country
asked each night by Announcer
W. Allen to write letters con
} taining -itprmetion -necessary~to the
| tests °
the| From this dat higt low }
| pressure maps will bé plotted. which
| will show exactly how WOK is com-
inder ‘the varying conditions
rent parta of the United States
An
|
t
|
ro to-morrow evening from
Anthony superstation KFI, in a con
cert given under the auspices of the
Viletor king Machine
© x« Pa
Company
ik] the coast
Jomeg n nac
director
Marhtine
| orchestra
second
P fi
the Vietor Talkin vert
Company, witl-conduct the pos powerte
This concert ibe thei. a eee
. e ithe test should prove interesting
arranged for | ctation mg nagement
coast en by the Victor), . ~- =
is especially
having en the
KO, Odkland ) ing low w avelengths to the new high
, “ 'power stations coming into being
who" was
land that before lung there will -be
SUSTATE-E —+
Tetors aT TNS imany more high power’stations than
House New |
musica wok
powerful stat
is per
h fionerring
the fesults
the
on
or
the
This
fa
n
ApS
exclusively
believes
w of th
aud
triie in vie
government now
any the € t
— thar is anal
}on Septembe
Maesiro
formerty on
Metropolitan * Opera
York, will bave under his direction |
for the Los Angelex « rt
chestra compored of memb
sé
Angeles Philharmon!
;
AOIO PASSED CALL
TO HAWAII THAT. |
~ FLYERS WEB NER
|Oakland KGO News ‘Flash!
Was First Advice to
Islanders | Palate Royale orchestra
. CKNC (356.9) Toronto, Ont
Flying Men Find Aid Nd orn harles E. Bodiey and
Warm Welcome Awaiting ls
tra; Bert Petch, elocutionist
CNRO (435) Ottawa, Ont
poam.—Chateau Laurier concert
tehestra
9 p.m —Kendall
George White, teh
dance orchestra
KFOA (454.3)
930 pm
it t
rehestra
KFWB (252) Hollyweed, Calif
Microphone. dbrevities.
Variety programme
ouartette
Warner
Prestozsi,
—Warner
(361)
A
Or tine
an or
8
SATURDAY, OCT. 10
CFCT (329.5)
p.m.—dvor
Garden orchestra
| ballroom of the
Vietoria, B.C
Henderson
playing from
Crystal Garden
CHIC (357) Torento, Ont
945 pm—f. Witson Jardine and
4
or-
Oakland, Cal, Oct. 9
tof the Island of Kauai
trom the spot where (
|} Rodgers and crew of the
sea -pl PN were found drif
| recetved their first news of th
jcue over radio KGO, | ted in
' land. California, 2.300 ies
jand i down to the in
to 3 the half starved men to land
information ame in a letter
from Miss Doris Durst,. visiting in|
the town of Lihue on the Talat ort
Kauni, addressed to her unc PF, RN,
} Ziel, Sen Francisco business man; }Faramia
immediately turned it to)> 10-12
| music
| Th tte KGW
| one am _‘gettiig fond || 19-12
of radios night. By luek|“"™
[ was at the plantation home
for dinner The telephone rang and
Edith Rice beckoned ir She_said
| ex: itedly' Y |
| Cousin
jradio KGO
tion in ¢
MeNell
Chateau
r
La
Inhabitants
fifteen miles
ommander Jonr
Seattle,
Programme
Eddie Harkness
Wash
ane 20 n and
Oak
away,}
fir
time | woo
Brothers’ synco-
blues singer
Brothers’ (frolic
Oakiand, Calif.
i. Daniele, plano-ac
de Martini, tenor
accordionist
pm.—Hotel
le
over Bt. Francis dance
(491.5). Portiand, Oregon
p.m.—Midnight, music. Indlan
t (405.2) Los Angeles, Calif,
6-6.30- pom. Art Hickman’s Biltmore
Hotel concert orchestra
6 29-7.309 pm—Radio kiddies’
5-10 p.m.—De luxe programme
10-11.30 om Art Hickman’'s
more Hotel dance orchestra
11,30-2 A&.m Last An
KJR (384.4) Seattie Wash
$.20-48- ftrm—de Warner Company
KNX (3368) Hollywood, Wf,
5 pm—Travel talk, W Alder
pm.—~Atwater Kent ilo or-
hour.
Dick Rice has Bilt
the Genera!
t “‘alifornia that Rodgers
fand his crew have—been..pleked..up+
| by a submarine fifteen miles off the |
coast of our island.” \
“We jumped in Mr Rice's
ond rushed to the radio station
it. wae all dark So we raced
to hear Dick's radio say more We 7.15 pom
| waited but were disappointed; noth-| | 7-20-8 pm
ting more was sahi about Rodgers. On pear
| the way back we stopped at the wire- Laslabouilicer of its first. birthday
j less station, bechuse it wap, Tighted| 10-11 p.m—Ray West's
up. The operator said that. he had) Grove darice orchestra from
just heard on a small set in his home,|sador Hote!
submarine towing Rodgers and his}, 9 m entlnenrion
4 pirthday par
plane into Eihue barbor; for God's} "BO (ace) San. Francisce, Calif.
sake get on the (wire | €35-7.50 pom.—Waldemar Lind and
SEE SUBMARINE the States Restaurant orchestra
“Dick and. aul stayed at the wire- Se me Seattinn Was
lL less station, but Air Rice, Juliet, | _¢ $9-7.45—p.2m-——Hernvie—King and—nis |
| Edith. and. wiyself @rove furtously | suner-sotoists |
| down to the wharf. We were the first}
ones there. Edith telephoned the
just heard
lectric sta KHJ
“ay
car | Rs
but} om
over | Bpadden
ches
*
Insect life, Harry W. Me
Church announcements |
Wurlitser pipe Organ
P
house at KNX,
Open in
Cecoanut ;
Ambas- |
|
of KNX's
Lansing, Mich.
Dinner concert .
§:40-12 pim.—Uncle Hal and his stars |
of Radio. .. .
sheriff and the doctor to come down,! PB 4 (286.8)
Sbe then awoke the wharf-keeper, 10-95 ».m.--Speed-W
wie —ttihiooked—thre—cdeek tt wie ot wos (483 a rt, lowe
i black night and we could see noth- 9-10 p.m—May Chambers, soprano:
}ing but the submurine’s lights blink: /7T Sioat, baritone: Emil Huss, reader
ee Rec 11-12 ea LeClaire Hotel orchestra;
“Suddenly we heard a splashing weco (avaay, Minneapel
It. was Mr. Cenie, bis pretty daugh- 6.15 pm.—Dick Long's
ter, Clarissa, dressed in overalls and} orchestra.
shirt Hke the Hawalians dress, Dick! 2s m nad aes! policoesbies.
and Paul. They were rowing out tb; > pm, usical programme,
the plane ‘in the only small boat in! 10.05. pim—Diek Long's Nankin Cafe
Lihteé. The pine hed Deen Gut Wose WDAF (365.6) Kansas City, Mo.
by the submarine, and the buys wed) 7148-1 m.—Merry Old Chief, Plan-
we tw atin, tut thelr tie qacrted. biopsy Bd c= ; Pagal ge
Dick yelled back to us, ‘Drive to on FAA os ogg ney yenss a
N f , “ pem— r Grounds.
Nawilliwilli, they are adrift again —State’ Fair Ground
PLANE IN SAFETY —Baker Hotel orchestra,
“Mr. Rice drove us ove to the’ lit- B (315.6) New York, N. Y.
tle cove. |He then gave orders for 7 nayeneD by! ne nage
tre. om «
Conte, Clarissa and the boys man- 10-50-11.90 p.m.—Arrow head Ino -or-
aged to tow the plane into the mouth }chestra, e S —s
T the viver where “the water waet ™ ©
moother, I waded out. alongside the Withee
boat and.watched he, auido tend Sm
their Welsere tis and orders.” Com- te this
artists
Litth Symphony
on Serenaders | Billy.
Sectric waves ore enpatte of travel
heing received
distimnvces.” .
ing ‘and
great
ORIGINAL, WAVES VERY SHORT
Senatore Marconi Pecalied that his
originat of thirty years
igo sitorter than
the h have r
the attention
id. Speaking of
nicl warm trib-
William Preece
British
acrosa very
Appa
utllixed
shortest waves
been attr
the radio
bis ¢arly Work
ute. te ve late
engine in-chief of
office thirt? ago
Sir Willlam 1
of ‘the few scientists whe
that early date -reallzed sonvething
ef the enormons poesibilities of eter}
Irie wave t be grate
to his memer) the
arus
waves
w
cently ing
wc
ot
t
the pest
years
was one
t
very
‘ 8
wt
importance «
wes ongaged
yout office
the
whieh
ee
I
,
on at
tt =
at pre
trend +
Arhong
mation the
ply. were the
conditions, amount
nlit whethe
sent operniing in the -low wave
the
fa
tems of infor-
asked to sup-
Aimospheric
volume, tone
distorted,
evident,
gih
upen
and the
= were
following
of
clear or
sding weer
the approximate
the of
wer
len
oft the vet
which Signals received
Whe of- antennt—used-longth—_ofan-
tenna, Relght from the ground, ete,
In to stimulate interest in
é getnent of stn-
away. approeximate
radla da
' fans in cach state
inthe Dnited States asl in ouch —
provinee In ©
” ivpe vel
orde
tl terts ew
ts
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11
CFCT (329.5)
nd ti]
peake Quain
(252) Hollywood, Calif.
Warner Brothers’ movie
Frank FP and Vie. Beall,
BONES Myers Aeolians
orchestra Mathews, blues
Victoria,
pane—Obr
Dean
8.c.
int
Al
Vee
(961)
Calvary
Oakland, Calif,
Presbyterian Church
KGO Little Symphony -or-
KGOoO
y.m.—Calvary Presbyterjan
Chareh
‘KGW (491.5)
; nat
rst
Portiand, Oregon
Presbyterian Church
Church of Christ,
(405.2)
§.50 pr
teri® orchestra
7 pom
neert
7-7.20 p
Church
8-10. p.m
KJIR
1s pm
organist
Los Angeles, Calif,
Leighton's Arcade Cafe-
Art Hiehman’s
orchestra
Firat Methodist Episcopal
Biltmore
n
Mar.
(384.4)
Mrs
21 Music. Company,
Seattle, Wash.
Montgomery Lynédh,
n FE
pom
Assoc la
rst
Puget
M. E., Church
Sound Savings
on orchestra
Hollywood, Calif.
Presbyterian Church
KNX
7-8 pr
of Hollywe
<9 pm
orchestra
$+ 10.30 Pm.
Hills Nurseries
KTAB (215)
a.m.—-Bible
Servic
(326.9
Fire
od:
Ambassador
Hotel concert
Programme, Beverly
Oakland,
lecture
Calif,
am
7.45 pm
9.20 p.m
_ KTCL (305.9)
7:50-2.10 pm
Scientist
$.10-10.10 p.m.-—International
Students’ Association
WOAW (526) Omaha, Nebr,
9 a.m.—Chabel service
9 pem.—Chapel © service
woc (483.6) Davenport, towa
6.30-7 ‘ “The ,»Spirit
Samuel fe e
—~WEAF Atwater
Church
Concert
-
service =
Seattle,
First
Wash.
Church
ot
Bible
ot
. rs.
8.15-9.15 p.m cent
48-1145 P.m.~Musicale; Palmer
KOA (322.4)
Denver, Colo.
a.m.—St
John's Episcopal Cathe.
0.m.—Organ_recital
7.30 pm —St, John's Episcopal Cathe.
rai
WBAP (475.9) Fort Worth, Texas
Methodist sthdirch
it anr—First
1220 pm—Comic section) Uncle
a -
—WEEM~ (228) CHicage, - Mi. :
8-10 p m.—Harel MeDee: contralto.
Samavor orchestra; Sunset male quar-
Corinne Jordon; Joseph
+ Jig Sulvan, tenor _
m. utty Club request
WGCP (315.6) New ¥
8-915 p.m—Midred -
9.16-9.30 p.m. —B'
+ 9.20-9.45 pom. —
) SOprANo.
eature
N.Y.
«10
tertan
* 1
—¥TCPORTA DATLY
WESTERN DEVELOPMENT| —_ - —eEEEE— © ae ats [| ‘BEHIND
ca AT ST AKE... LIBERAL! —* $ e : ; — . sabe 7 : 4 “Emigration to the ©.8. jias_ only
_ LEADERS WARN. Jeni Oia ae ae
(Cogtinued from paxe »)
—_— been on a large scale under & ory
(Continue ‘rom page 2) policy,” he declared. |
SHOULD APPRECIATE WORK - Since April of this yaar. #4, 449 Brit x
——— ——— ish people had comme to Cannda tot’
: ; : jl feel it is a duty imposed on you | live, Mr, Ivel said, ant 53936 €an-
ONE ISSUE ONLY , ‘ ; s s : P . . to come forward on Octoter 29 and | adiane hat come Hee tren ee ae ee 2 = Rahat ;
Among. those on the platform ; ; ra é show by your votes that you appre-|¢d States. If the King Government . ae .
yee: Hon. W. H, Sutherland, Hon. P . i: chite the-work- done-bythis Govern- be: eS ee PE Beiper| ee Terrible affliction quick ly
Rg eo Ma = ; Garis , nent,” he declared, Before voting, he | intion would flow into the country_as | felieved by “Eryit-a-tives”
and B.C oy egg ee ee 4 . suggested, the people of © Victoria in Laurier’s day, Mr. Ivef predicted. ;
_H. H. Shandley, . president of the 4 , should compare the condition of their | DEBT INCREASES
Victoria Liberal Association, who harbor and their docks now with the The Conservative Party. Mr. Tvet
the speakers and
ae ; condition in which the Méighen Gov- — air aneuaet feet of _
je 0 e .) ‘allures on e groun that (janada
ernment had ety aa eald. had on had-passed through a war but actu-
< 2 x ag - ally the Conservative Government
=——“=tha Conservat eth once — sidered its work compiste, 11% promise | had incrensed, the wational debt by
come to the conclusion that te . ai] fulfilled, when. it ona “aes Nona $332,000,000 after the war.
were two Mr. Meighens—one , Point piers.It_ had been the ae ral'|. When the King Government _had
preached against the West in Mari % s Government which had outfitt Prise been ‘elected, said Me, Teer’ ror
times then claimed to favor jus- docks, made thetp, uaeful’ in building | rr9¢ tide in years, tie national budget
tice for the West when he spoke up the city’s trade.” And it wee she had shown surpluses The Govern-
here. Mr. Meighen ‘had come out in ¥ } Liberal policy; he emphasized, whieh ment's policy waa to reduce tlie na-
the Maritimes definitely and dis- had brought - grain to the .Pacific | sional debt, and this it was doing
tinctly in plain English against rate ; . | Coast and would bring it here in| Gry in this way could taxes be re-
equalization. To the King Govern- 4 H ever-increasing quantities to keep the | guced, he stated.
ment and to it alone, he pajd, must r ' harbors here and on the mainiand PRODUCTION uP
go full credis for, the recent reduction 2 2 ; } busy. maculae te Waal atts -
in grain rates weatbound. TheGov- eS. i ‘ - : “You have one elevator anseret oe vat tanwae want ne ae ee
ernment, he explained, had taken the CAILLAUK ARRIVES=—loseph Catiaux, French Minister of Finance, headed the French debt funding commission that arrived in New which you yoted the other ¢ay, ee
: . we have a second elevator concern | anee of trade under “the Meighen
stat te ih pert oe rete be <4 York on the-Paris en route to Washington. This picture, snapped as the Hiner docked, shows, left to right; Marquis Pierre de < hambran, ready to sign re leas@” he said. “Are | Government had been turned Into an
equal service. schetianxBSETF Henator Paul Dupuy, Olivér Moreau-Neret, Senator Louls Dausset, Minister Caillaux, Senator Henrt ‘Bereneger, Deputy Lucien Lamoureaux, you going to tell the people of Canada enormously favorable balance, while
_ British Columbia, - Mr. Shantiey Senator Fernand Shapsal and Deputy Maurice Bowkanowskt. - Y e ; —_ that you appreciate, this develop- | Produation in all lines had increased.
deciared, had been entitled to equal- | —— aera — - - ee ge ment? We want coal bunkers, coal ee se gal gett rer y ALBERT
ized rates when it entered Contfed=) ment had followed with _# sage MUST JUDGE TOLMIE serene moving eastward—elevators in Van- UNIVERSITY DEDICATION storages, end the jamber assembly propos 4
= i
. f YOUNG
eration ag part of the confederation es “ear - , =r oa lant now under way if we are to do | creases” would inevitably. increase} _ :
Are wei : | proeucing % surplus of $35,000,000. couver —Waiesathae-erekm movement Seatiie:<-Octe. 4 Henry tha business to which we-are en- | prices here, and he produced figures “Bight ¥ i
pact. er ae in the Government's term of office. BY iS POLICY chowed-and congested. ‘Suasalo of the Upi con. oaieet Aavelop (2? show how existing tariff! on auc. cig years ago I was jaid up
The Mackenzie King Goverament he said, the Government had saved} = ‘He had in his hand the key to) wil assist in the dedicat Pate Peete re: sabd “Wo shave 40: 5 re B tomobilés; «for instance, raised...the with . Inflammatory rheuniaeetn,
agrees that we-are_entitied to these | the Catiadian people some $49:900 000} (Continued from page 1) right this situation—freiebt- Yates. | versity of British Columbia ie Oni |return, cargoes for hips even th Mee of cara here far- above .prices | scarcely” alte to ave finhd
- pates_in_justicé and equity.” -he-a8-}-in taxes: —— - ee He did not turn it!” General Odlum [ver Octoner is and 16. ‘Besides Re liond grain; we must do everything is ts = 7 cee | scarcely able to" move hand-or-foot
serted. }t_is_abeurad for. the Opposttton tot * DISTINGUISHED SOLDIER” deciared. University of Washington, he will re- | te establish industries.” or 40 same cara in the United | There
“In this election you are not voting z * : a | -
was Kiduey Trouble, _miser-
< io tr States. Aa ;
tor Dr. Tolmie or Mc. Ivel—you. are compare .conditions with those pre General. Odlum was introduced as| “The King Government had. that oe agg er, er thet BIG ISSUE -TO DECIDE ee Government's action -in-né- able Indigestion and If _ diffi+
) x wer. 2 ¥' " in ow * es —— ow . Ps Ze in ‘ |
voting for the ey policy of the Gov- wailing in the United States. THe\a distinguished soldier who had) key and turned itt foundation | This is a time in the history of |-gotiating trade treaties with other | esities—Aa—eoon_ae-T began to-jise
trnment cr the Opposition " He
legacy of railway wet inherited by4 brought his fighting qualities into | Peet Meighen Government could ——=— Western Canada that marke'a at walens, Mr. ivel went oD ae | eruit eae f coda wet uA” itn
pdded that if the Conservatives were the present Canadian Government | the political arena. have delivered the goods, but didn't MUSSOLIN? VERY BUSY epoch—this is the time when we must | pe of enormous advantage, perticu- | proyement. | 1 waa relfeved of
glected the rate benefits granted to w a it =
bs i } ' He gual rehte or go on as We | rangements would b tld ible, « --
tha Westby the Government would] Gg Bion a > j : 2 A day empowered Premier Mussolini | e .eque 3 6 u ulld up vast new . ‘ 00° Peas
me, Government, h in Canada to-day—and this was & ‘a ge TP ge 7: decd ely [act a8 Minister of Fir Le count | are.” Mr. Ivel asserted. trade for Canada, he believed have been 100% better of Rheuma-
BIG SURPLUSES | good thing for-Canada. These divis- he man who did the deed surely ) Voipi, the incumbent, rneys to the| Three main Issues confront. the The Government had Gone much \¢igm and Kidney Disease.”—-Mrs. Al
| 1 } ir , ii. fur - ¢ it t
Dr. King pointed out that the) had amaiga a the National ‘| into being. The Liberal Party he} Despite. Dr. Tolmie’s fine quatt- | funding oi Italy's dul tha ltion and freight rates ments at the Ogden Pol 2 Leester, Mass
Teaders of the two wrent- parties had wars bs aan tham and turned | dectared, stood . for humanity first, | ‘ and they are many—it is well | tr a, a. onene Premier | Mussalin| a aden Point piers, the |
spoken in B.C recently. From theif! operating a janie... operating Whila the Conservative Party stood + that you should consider the many; - t |
and now that of finance temporarily to the election of the Laurier Govern velopment. He asked the people of
= ~~ ment th 1896 a huge moyement of | Victoria to endorse the Gover ‘si the kidr nd livet 1
ro 8 : ainlhe | lnolicy. Vote for the policy! I see JAIL GUARD CHANGES : - 4 jovernment's idneys and live normal
af a bad. de Melgnes Se fs not confined to any == SE ise the Western pa | ts Ge Canadians to the Unitet States had | work on its behalf, and enable. it-to | action, increase the fiow-of gastric
iy aera -~ : t * ? : - AM = I Decl \ r ¢ y re : 1
= - policies that road | ere 1 remembe an he-went on, and added th erated by the Government ¥ + Wetrnt peg: det sd anRadical changes |oceurred.. A study of history showed | continue this programme juices, and make the digestion com-
is ‘policy «is not like t) y b n R. W, € cs, Atierne) . Cc » - ' , "
; < . Mei n had misreprer t era) policies | on - JA | 7 2 ¥-lehe most prosperous period aince con mait Chapter, L.0.D.E., will hold their
Mr. Metghen’s tarift proposats Dr a“ iat cone " . % Eastern policy—it does not se to i © result Inquiry st ae rye : ne s. weil
King recalled, were ¢ sfeated in Par- | rial conditions fs For. the first-time since 1 came | pyeare a new -evit by giving the West f five prisorters last federation. Since 292, however, the | regular monthly meeting on Monday
my
es” cor . the eon-
easence of}
Dr. King attacke ;
i
alone, put it on an entirely different The -—_Gen that The King Government delivered leay whether we will insist that we " ‘o) z be
basis than t! ¢ the American | great Pb hots ice asintet the paods; end-the-fiow-of business | , Rome. Oct. Tao Cabinet {say “whether we larly to British Columbia. These ar=|.Constipation and Liver
ainly be repealed.
4 STRIKING CONTRAST the Government, Dr. King rec 1, ions had brought two great parties | '* entitled-te-the-credit and support. | Us ted States to r te for. the | electors, he said——the tariff, immigra- | for Vietoria. He pointed to improve- Ibert Young, 39 N. Aspland St,
coun ;
i Speaking of the Immigration prob- | establishment. of a lumber assembly | Fruit-a-t
eign affairs ine ar d aviati lem, Mr. Ivel declared that previous | plant n , ‘4 . 4
utterances the peopte could. form 4} surpluses b $40,000,000 in the tist}for__property ‘first and humanity | not as @ PF onal friend, but as the | USP airs, marine, war and aviation, i dec rt c } plant, the beginning of elevator de- tis “rea
conohisien- | two wears |} afterwards. | representative < party and @ h Valuat onic
tolerated in B.C., he was glad some Cofiservatives were a9 the present guard system at the | that this movement._had.not been —- plete 1 natur . oka Af
an i ine abou | 1 ane ‘ana da f need r a am P an natural again. 25c and do
ean designed to bring abo | “They desirable 3 present to hear a discussion of Lib- | ay nity as Canadas first oe a clit juit-hare were forecast yea-}serjous during the Laurier tegime Esquimalt §0.0.2——Tho Esqui-|at att dealers
nity } ’ oN i
, : v. Dr ffirmed. Industrial; home from overses in this T Geverr last! country had scarcely grown at all, | October —12,—at 2.45, at the Saflors’ | .
Nee BY NS OV ET Wet tre Fr T . . ; 8} orivileges it is sntitied t6. Te] ses Spe ig
lar ~o ve Rpg et | mywee-every-yeareih} ght heart, snd | because 1 be } te cae ae ac "yt a i becaunl whereas it had inereased-in Laurier's | @lub. [UTILIZE TIMES WANT ADS
befall them in this elec~- tf years.. While Mr.) leve that this time we stand fOF | \, the long run {U Would not help ws
tio?” he as “| think it 1 to lists of saree li mething clean-cut and definite.” | the Liberal, policy is only justice
The Meighen policies, he added, | failures now’ a8 wick a 1 th t he declared In 1931 he recalled, the | ¢air and equal treatment for all
rad been reje 4 in 1921 in the not tell the elector ne said, at| Liberal Government had been elected | erty of Canada!”
worst defeat ever meted st to a during his regime the failures had/in a, welter of confusion and dis |r 4 a a
ret at 2. p acd much more numerous. couragement, and without a very | p
political party in Canada. Now The : nt, .
Colonist _was_seeking r that The Conser ve Party, Dr. King | definite policy Since then, however TO GIVE RECITAL
Mr. Meighen's halt : a tot-t-went—-¢ < to go back \ the Government, after clearing wf
jowers would grow 12 is | to the p y fi ago al-{the cutestanding difficulties of the
spite of the fact that a= | though ditions utterly j situation, was marching steadily ta
bec wing of the Conservative rty | different Canada to y needed | wards definite goals
han aetinitety repeat : .) mo is he _ re iterated, be-| THE LIBERAL GOAL
* hen’ seahip throug . - é ee ‘
feighen 8 le rehip hr - a a “ qr * Premier King, sal Cerrerat<sdia,
chief, Mr. Patenaude. “This, or - ; ‘ ldiad. thus defined the Liberal policy
m oie said, was perfect dessa nsil) (eyes : = ov The goal o he L “arty is to
ou t ith
Whatever §& xplanations : Mr.} sult unfavorable trade ba ances | AONE Se SO eee ane ah aty = 3) . : > ey
Meigher cht make, #al ir King ‘ hange< o enormousty ney o . y% a . bd —e
“s _ I See hat he had attacked halances and Canada was protect them against the impositions The most urgent requirement in.
the Government for giving. the West | now. the fifth trading nation of the) of bg Hepa aha é ° i, a . .
rg “ rvative cause in the | T ng to freight rates Dr. King utterance. of a braye man, a man of , : 3 US ZZ a a s cu u
Naritimes; > he predicted,| declared tha®_there Was only one y \?- : s
Mary not overcome the Maritimes” declarer icy for Oqpada—Complete | vers Odium recajied ‘constant . or ANADA produces every year large quantities of wheat, oats, barley,
yosic antagonism to a high tariff. | equalization Pa as bec wtth--+ Beenite Jing eg 2 ; \ Wiha butter, cheese, bacon, beef, egg® apples, potatoes, grass seed and
retohing over he years petween \ 4
MARKETS. BIG NEED FULL EQUALITY PROMISED O21 and the presest. These, he said, ij ; clover seed that she cannot consume. Her natural outlet for these pro-
“Canada's need ts markets, he} “We have no more right to have! reve E
led how the Premier had looked ; i ‘eain——the one great consuming countr, of
deciared. “The Maritimes lik very | unequal freight tariffs than Un-| more and more to the West with the q ‘ ducts 15, of course, Great Britai 4 4 y
part are ae | sectional customs tariff,” he] object of removing the burdens im es | the world with an open market.
- fon iat ertaneattom wilco an vcsatheshenesapige tit Unfortunately, nearly eve other country with any surplus of food
come. This will mean: new | shh ib Athy Pea a erg : i products seems to ‘want to send its surplus to this same market.
< sulation to the Pacific Coast new | mier King has stake is polit: . i so3 : fret the
h markets, he ¢x-| stim - atic . to the trade of Weatern | cal future on that broad policy. I 4 ‘ . ’ The keenness of the competition on this, our only mar ’ en
the. Liberal. Party had and Eastern Canada. I do} For the first time a Prime Min ; +t t energy and ressurcefuiness our_campetitors began to impress them~
crag e British. preference. | not- stand here 00 OF hoger BD gigpace imie « Japoelige + Pager tee " selves upon the Department of Agriculture some time ago, put itis -enly
pa ; 1 and v in-| say that prosperous conditions here) = rig whatever political con- " ; ithi i i
“anads th B | will help ero eptet and the Maritimes.| sideration may we ; Al xy | within very- recent years that the real and only way to grepP rs with this
Meee not think that a speech) ‘purning to Mr. Meighen's attitud: ‘ : \ ut | problem has been discovered, or at least put into effect. his Department
here indicating one thing One %|on freight rates, the ¢ al pol , “ now believes, as do also most of the farmers of this country, that the
nape ea 0 Ee eRe oe thig| ut. Oat Me eee by at “grading” of our @ ricultural products is the ape f and practice that is
sehen’s | ments cre jted to him y P no j ~ | bag Py T 1
age. refe Eries to Mr. Meighen | political ¢ anadian Pre The Can- vn ~ : secing us through the struggic and will assure us of our rightful place on,
attitude on ron to ask yourselves | hdian Press, however, had insisted [iii = . : - the British market. t
‘ : pyre “ a } a thie Australian } that Mr. Meighen had Attacked Pte} —s 1 ‘ wee :
ww pro~} toiday_ta——do-vou like oe Austra tec; relief granted to the West The élec ee “Grading” 18 shillings a long hundredweight below
allowed s Mee or. King declared te | tors, must study’ these” statements : of products, © _ Danish, has gradually grown in the esti-
Susber 6kT om crown 12 * & : . 6 wey nest there is | sseinst each-dther_and_reach a con- P mation of the British wholesale buyer
ir cial eb tagp tor gery aoe ia wo oo | clusion ma! ter, cheese, , ral way until it ia now uoted at only from 1 or
fraw pre
tt
! an ht :
der Government contre as exported STRUCTURE TOTTERING 4 TREST®, i way less to at most 5 or 6 shillings pat long
i tion . a ce an Primrose Lodge Busy- There Ww moall | Canada’s entire freight rate struc ' . > . t “POOR” classes. i iantrotese below the best os
amount of anll artlicsg sha ,dplendia attendance of mé mbers | ture. General Odlum explained. had Te 4 ; i This improvement in price s, 2
wan, allowed = 04 2 ne | and five visitors at the regulat meet- | been based on injustice—it favored . Y a Thee —_ works ar pow — course, due to quality and has come
States but only, when, it Some not | 8s five visitortimrose No, 32 ofthe | the East against the West, ‘This fag i ; leseribing ON grades, Durrved in grad-. about very gradually, the spread nar-
— aE veo 1a ret : not! Haughters and Maids-—of viand | structure to-day was tottering . : is meant. — to rowing down by a shilling or two a
exported would re en " , ‘ . Pride er | i i
Gafada: ix making her paper busi- bald 10: a oe nytt tne Lies ia: Stel ing is threefold month until now-it is not at all a rare
neta the greatest in the world, the oan ee TOYO ve the chal: a seal te gyre oer { F (1) Educational. When the pro- occurrence to see best Canadian
Sinister pointed 0 ee er hat} aance held after the last moeting was! applause._“"Phe Liberal Party came| / ducer sees the relative quality of his on & par with the Danish article.
the exo re ¢ raw pu Pro otiopent | reported a Br aT auccess, as Was also | to the conclusion that the only policy | MRS. EVA BAIRD product he is « urred on to maintain Eggs—c was the first country,
Lere:-% the _Uni States ex-|t niet drive held at the home of | to follow here is the simple policy of that quality if t is the “best” orto to grade and aidardize eggs. These
ported | ra - material he form or! Worthy ter Weaving, and the con- | justice ° the well-known contralto, who, re- improve the quality where necessary. des and standards apply not only to
aes ta on ahi me cae vener and wmmittees received Tita poticy had resulted in legi cently returned after studying under gra ard it ms
cotton, t va es VORrS oanaltfees TeCHIeS | cen ordering a remulted in legia- | Coveral of the leading vocal teachers (2) Fair Play. When products are export, inte: rovinelal and import ship-
DOLAAR UP TO PAR e OF dated, and one pro-| This had been followed by the Rail- | of Italy, will appear in recital at the not graded the inferior article for ments, but also to domestic tracing:
Canada’ siniprevement in 8 busi eee ved, ister Pearson,| way Board's grain rate reductions, | Empress Hotel on October She various reasons often being» as much as The basis is interior quality, clean-
nees Wa? Dr King 4 serted. ia _no} will be assisted at the piano by Mrs. the superior article, and the credit and ness and weight.
matter for argum It ts proved by| A. J. Gibson, and Miss Una Calvert, advantage of putting the superior pro- Standardizi c di has
the part that the Canad jollar, t il ibute : ke t rdizin anadian eggs
ey a an dollar pianist, will contritute = sroup ot} duct on the market is lost to the OM@ - established confidence between producer
whist dri tha hore of- the } protest:
former, 3 Dalhousié., Street, on General Odium warmly defended
worth at eights cents In the! yonday
United States under the Conserva-
tive regime was now worth 100]
evening, October 19. Satis- these policies as fair because they
factory, reports were received from] involved equalization in the rates of
the convenets of the arious stalls | all commodities in all parts of Can
for the bazaar to be held on Novem-|ada. Inno way did they injure the
H
numbers. } who really deserves it. and consumer and between exporter
ow . (3) British imuporter, and ae rennin, in &
Saanich JA series of events | eatly-increase demand for the Cana-
araar everal membérs: took |'Maritimes as suggested by Mr | will take place this month under the a cules ee ee ian egg both at home and abroad. P
' ar j " - . . | auspices of the Saank h Women's In- > | ~- article he is buying e
and seene.. It-waa decided | Meighen. When equalization was} stitute. On’ Octeber a7 eantal ane ah) ly, because itis guarante Other. products might be mentioned
King replied ty hold a dance after the next meet- | « ompleted, he explained, the Mart-| Gance will be Meld an 1 on October an I | and gradually eve body where. grading has worked to the great
Le ee Piehe : Gonaervative: Govern-| In& 0° Databer 28, and Sisters Bis- | tities would receive the advantage of) 24 the Brentwood Bay Concert| tii! what the “best” article re advantage of the producer and to.
a ell ett rative Govern” | senden and Humber are in cherge | equalized rates on thelr products Company will put on a vauderitie | f or tastes like. In short, & advancement of Canadian agriculture.
faced a deficit of $41,000,000 in one At he ee OF et tie counter | 1008 ae. the business had re-| show. On Hallowe'en October 30, a] bout standardization and ensures to Already Great Britain recognizes our
year’s operations. The King Govern-|* ents were sr" d.and th a sad | ved thia benefit a few weeks ago. | fancy dress social and dance for the oducer the best ice tore cattle, wheat cheese, egg’. apples
. spent a social time together GOVERNMENT DIFFICULT | children of the district will be given.) : the pr e peices. stor ° ° ia >
|
. . : ‘| i
gasisted by Oliver, will hold @ | which had roused Mr. Meighen into |
t
}
|
the Conservatives im-
*. asked voice.
‘t see how they can.” Dr
‘ 4 oats as the best she can Duy.
1 eee ; ; mug j Canada now grades =
“Twenty Cub” Formed—Yesterday ri eneral Odtum surveying Cana Ma - ———— - — } pont b It is for us to so improve our other
16 : from coast to coast, pointed out that : hay, — cag 4 cula:
at 1216 Richardson Street there was — ° ss = . : 1 d ba ucts, parti rly our butter and
es i a bass 83 | this country's clear-cut divisions i ter, cheese, wool an nee “i i i
a aed a literary and social cub | 1% nty me| Ts ‘clts have beer in Oe" bene. bacon, as to bring them also into this
| to be called “The Twenty.” The ob- made government enormously diffi- f results have bees pel VE f “the bes the Bri &
‘oop of this club is to keep abreast Del eult. ‘The chief point to be settled / Gicial and in some cases quite markedly: list of “the best on the | tish marke
| ject of this y atudy present-day prob- in thie government was the coun- fi ' en though the grading system hes and consequently the highest priced.
the times, to Maintain and stimulate "Y's fundamental financial. policy as Ps Deen in effect in some cases for only Grading enabled us to do this fot
| ar? Interest in all forms of useraturs pct, cog on Saag res en Vg two or three years, thus:— che eat, bee a P
past end present. This society Ww serv e arty. r ne : \
form -nuclews where students 2 of | the country with'a vast tariff w, = Cheese—Grading began April ist, eee =a [a m ta dd #
like tastes may meet once & month | the Liberal Party believed that Can- : ‘ \ 1923. Canadian cheese the year before si
and spend, a pleasant e¢vening in ada could not live to itself dlone, and ; ; she. had fallen into such disfavour. on the
anal intercourse-and discussion. The | must base its development on Its British market that New Zealand cheese tvé
club will meet in the houses of the| export trade. b iN wes quite i preferred. Today first ebiecties
{various members. At ite first meet- While Ontario wanted & high tariff cents per :
ing Mr. William” Mtackay-wee es ¢he—prairies__wanted a low tariff.
, as president and Captain $A. M.} Looking at these divisions. of opin-
: ners a secretary. and © PoP enere- Lion Freouer Res had come to the |
. ' é =bconcluston that Canada didnot want
oftee eee caren Ng A pind an Ontario tariff or a prairie tariff,
\ > & . but a national tariff—a compromise
SOTTO es ! that would be for the best interest of
Hallowe'en Masquerade. The com- the whole country. “Only by such «
mittee Yor the annual Hallowe'en pottey~ he naserted, could — national
masquerade ball of Queen Alexandra. unity be achieved, Mr. King, he
Why Suffer With
Nevinw-_ia.-14,_W.2t.A.,-Maccahees, anid, fett that if Canadian nation-
have announced their intention of hood was to- be preserved then all
providing. balloons for the ladies and causo of friction between East and
verpentine for the gentlemen to fur- | West- all thought of division between
her insures jolly time on’ October them must be moved.
the Chamber of Commerce BOTH GOOD MEN F
AnditeMim. Handsome costumes| General Odlum said he believed
and tombola prises are being secured, | that both Mr. Ivel- and Dr: -‘Toilmie
and-Hunt’s ‘orchestra wil provide | were good men. He challenged Dr.
perfect dance music from 9 p.m. to | Tolmie, however, to~“mute-good =|
#19, 782
307.266
Clover wea a3
pe ei. __Tke committee, Mesdames | claim that the Meigh ily quoted . ;
E . eo, Mesdames | claim that the Meighen Governmen' was
Schmelz, Btephén, Maxwell und Misr} had-tried to sive the ‘West rate —
Teld. atinounces: that tickets’ can be | tice... ..While Dr._-"Folmio_was__ in
secured front -most-ot the: he-~ h grain ot 1
ee marl Doky sition, be-9nld, be bad a Wodkins = ae : ) <— pOMiUON- DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE,
° ~ * = 2. . . 2° 7m a m me =
= =
ey erg
aatrength.
th “this darter wa
Last Minute News on Stocks’
and Financial
Affairs
New York, Oct. 10 (By R. P. Clark
& Co.)—The market was strong and
active during the greater part of to-
day's seston aithougk in. seme i
rections profit taking In advance of
the double holiday was in evidence.
‘ Week-end trade reviews spoke
very fayonable of prevailing. condi-
tions and: mentioned ‘further expan-
sion in many basic lines. Iron de-
mand is reported as improving.
Moter shares were, features of
and-much—of the buoyancy
probably trace-
able to the very favorable) earning
report of thé Nash Motor Compiny
and that company’s proposal to retire
ite. preferred stock. Merchandising
issues were also strong.
The’ market may’ likety-* continue
much of a speciality affair, but we
believe that caution should Be ex-
ercised gwith respect to: making new
Commitments at prevailing Jevels,
New York, Oct. 10 (By B.C. Bond
Corporation’s. Direct Wall Street
Wire)—The evening stock market
edition of The Wall Street. Journal
says:
Trading in the week-end added
weight to the current forward move
as toa great -bull market. Rails
were still in good demand as well as
General Motors and other automo-
bile issues, "I
Weekly— reviews of conditions tn
the mercantile field reported increas-
ing evidence of continued expansion
in business,
Nash was a strong spot spurting
seven points’ to 477 in response to
company's announcement to retire
the preferred diyidend.
Tremendous activity at rapidly
rising prices in the motor and related
shares was due to the attention
caled-to~the-remarkabie prosperity
of the auto industry by such exhibits
as the Nash nine months’ statement,
followed by the report of Ford
Motors of Canada, showing a balance
of over $87 a share in the year ended
July 31 last. General Motors ad-
vanced to new high level
CHICAGO | GRAIN |
Chitago, Oct. 10 (By R. P. Clark &
Co.) — Wheat: Great strength de-
veloped at the outset'and persisted
to the finish. Neavy buying led by
houses with .Eastern connections
swept all opposition aside. The under-
lying strength in the domestic situ-
ation at the moment is cbuntesacting
all other influences. Stocks-of bread
wheat in Duluth the last week.show-
ed a reduction of over 300,000 Bush-
els, The pun of wheat, both sides of
the line, is ‘letting up, due largely to
unfavorable weather, and as a result
the slow_foreign market is more than
offset, Covering by shorts who wish-
ed to even up for over the holida
Wks alr Inficencs in puttii¢e “ered
higher.’ Primary, receipts wer#@ less
than one-third the run of last year,
and’ reports indicated that nothing
much: is moving. December wheat
went to a premium over the May de-
very. Wheat is showing market
stability, and it may be unwise to
Press the market for a while, but
pending further developments of
bullish nature ‘would advise an atti
tude of caution
Chicago, Oct. 10. (By B.C. Bond
Corporation's direct pit wire
M1937
Wheat:..Persistént buying. by houses
with Eastern connectiéhs and cover-
ing bl local shorts ‘carried prices up
sharply in the wheat market to-day,
December showing a premium. There
was a lack of offeringe on the way
up, and the rally was easily attained.
Sentiment more bullish than of late
due to the strong local cash situation
We again repeat we would not tare
to be short any December wheat
Corn and oats were easier due to
the Government reports, but “the
strength in wheat led to buying, and
the early loss was soon wiped out.
Open
see ime
W) wee 240
Close
143-7
143-7
76
80-5
46.1
44-2
1-5
87
New V. Vein Discovered
On Engineer Group
Stewart, B.C. Oct. 3.—(By Mall)
~—It is possible that some work will
be done on the Engineer —group,
according to George Bunn, the owner,
who has put in most of the season
on. the property This season he
finished a fine cabin, built of peeled
logs and with a corrugated iron roof,
which is as good a home as any
during the Winter months, and is
close to his work.
The Engineer group, consisting of
four claims, is located on the south
fork of Marmot River, at an ee
of rom 2,000 to 3,000 feet, ia,
ily accessible, being eo five
miles from the boat landing. The
owner has driven a tunnel twenty-
feet off a vein that strikes north-west
and south-east, and Garries a con-
siderable amount of chalcopyrite and
some galéna, the vein beng pro-
nounced by a mining engineer to be
eleven feet in width ‘This Summer
hfe Veln owas stripped tet
five. feet down thé hill from the
tunnel mouth to where it disappears
under a glacial moraine. Some pros-
pecting was also done above the
tunnel, ge upward
continuation. he mountain is very
steep.
Another _ybin. with values prine!-
pally jn silver and lead, lies east of
the Bop pper'yein, and has been traced
by open euts for a distance of over
2,000 feet. . It strikes north and south,
and will intersect. the copper vein
further up the hill than either have
een traced.
—__This Summer George
ross vein which carries
richly -tmpregnated with
An intrusive dyke, about
found a
silver
bromides,
POR TEA
nA spreteomaneeenen tenes erento anes SG ge ANE GA em nee nrc te tee OTe
VICTORTA DATT “TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, OCTOBER 10, 1925
(Supplied by two local stockbrokers over direct New York wire)
High:
Ralle—
Atch., Top, & Santa Fe.121-4
Atlantic Coast Line ..194-4
Raltimoré, Obfo
Canadian Pacific ..
Chesapeake & Ohlo
Cc, M. @ &t. P,, pret
Chicago Northw
Chic, RI & Pi
Delaware & Hudso'
rie
Great “Norther,
Kansas City, Southern.
Miss, Kas, & Texas ..
Bisse. url pest
New ‘York Céntral
N.Y. NH. &
Ontario & W. mtern ...
Norfolk @ Western ..,
Pen
Pitt
Reading
St Louls &
St. Louis & 8
Southern “Pacific
Bo uthern Railway
ret. . 4
Wabash seas :
Wabash “A rosy. weer
Seaboard Air Line .., 47-2
Chrysler
Chandler Motor Co.
Continental Motors
General Motors
Hupp. Motors ..
Hudson Motor Co.
eae Truck .see-
Motore
ackard Mote
Pierce Arrow
a
Studebe
Dodee,
Do.,
Ajax_ Rubber :
American fosch Mag
ric Ste, Batter
erbody
fire Company
rich Rubber
Goodyear Tire ...
Kelly Springfield Tire,
Lee Tire & RB. Co .
Stewart Warner Co, ..-
Timken Roller enced
U Rubber .....
tube American fvgars
Tobaccos—
Amn. Sumatra Tob.
Reynolds Tob. Co.
Products
Coppers—
Anaconda ++
nerican Smmelters
Locomotive .114-2
Locomotive. 18-
a Locomotive .
falawin
Lt
Raliway Steel “Bprings
West Air Brake ....
Steele—
Bethlehem. a SR OT ee peer |) San | Ts
VICTORY BONDS
VICTORIA PRICES
Buy Bell
, _ Per $100 Per F100
Vietory 5%%—Tax Free
1927 ist June and Decémber
1933 let May and November
A937 Ist_June and December
War Loan, & Free
192 Gist June and December
1931 ist April and October
lst March and Sept...
(Payable New York)
v Lean, %
1827 Ixt May and November
1933 let\May and November
3934 lat Mer and DMewembaer
Dominion Lean
1928 16th April.and October
1944 15th April and October
1944 15th April an® October
196s ist’. Feb ant. Aus
(ONL) § per cept...
Add accrued interest to Gate: 1927,
181 days, $1,974 per $100; 127, 1922,
1934, 163 Gays, $2.441 per $100;1
178 days, $2438 per $100; 1944,
$2.195 pe 00
101.95
106.35
108.26
162.95
106.36
108.25
$9.60
101.85
104.00
100.60
102,88
106.00
301.15
103.90
20d An
1602.15
103.90
404.40
100.00
301.36
96.40
roLee
103.35
ov.4e
102.76
198,
Dunwell . *
Dunwell Partly Paid .
lacier Creek . “.
ladstone
Gleaner
a
pendence
nm Mines
tional C
Marmot Metals
McGillivray Coal
Phoentx
Idah
Porter
Premier Mines
Rufus
8
Surf Inlet Gold”
Terminus
Victoria
Ollea—
Britieh Petroleum
Spartan Ott
Trojan
B.C. Mon
Great Weat Perm.
Gregory Tire and Runver
" Bales
1.000 Glacier ssc cccccereweeseurete
Retail Business
Moving Upward
New York, Oct, 10,—-Duhb's in its
review of business across the con-
tinent to-day sa) that “both
staétistical records and reports
from widely separated cities give
Amer evidence of the up'
course of business.”
Bradstreets says that cooler
weather with snow or rain. is
stimulating retail and jobbing
trade in all sections.
Marshall Field & Company in
their business ,statement to-day
say that the current wholesale
distribution—ot_arygoodes exceeds
by a considerable margin and is
much greater than “for the cor-
responding period of a year ago.
Collectjons are reported as about
the same.
Indlvidually, Gimbel_Bros—and-
Macy, the great New York depart-
ment stores, are in a position
where the anticipated Increase In
business will lead. to. an-ineresse
in dividends.
“| Republic I.
Gulf States Steel ..... #82
@ 8. - M-4
Siose-Sheffield Steel ..109-7
United States Steel ...123-7
Do., pref.
Olle .
California Pete.
Coaden Ol
Invineible Oli”
Pacific Oil
Phillips Pete.
MAE OL oe mmrnen
‘yal Dutch
Shell Upion O11 .
Sinplair Ol.
areagand ou—c auit..
Ott J “
y
Texas Pacific ©
Ind, Ol & Gas ‘
Industrials and Miscelignecs:
Allied Chemical «ene l 08-4
Allis Chalmers Mfg. .. 88-4
American ‘Agi. Chem... 28-1
‘Ama, Agric, Corp.
ger
xe. 288.
Car ye Be i 4
Linseed «~~
Radiator “sii ‘
Teh. & ‘Tele.142-2
Woolens + 39-3
Goods b8-4
American
Associated Dry
Atlantic Guif .
Austin, Nicholls
Barnedall “A”
Beech Nut Packing .
Brooklyn Edison...
a And Bros, “A”
Packing
(} flat for all grains,
Consolidated Gas ,
Continental Can
Corn Products
Davidson Chemical
Powder
pan Kodak
Peecus rt
General Asphalt
General Blectric
Industri al Aleohol
Intl. C'mbet'l Engine
Int). Harvester
Intl Mere
Intl Paper
Loews tncorporated—
Dept. Btores
omery Ward
nat Biscuit
orth American” Co
Pac, Gas @& Elec. Co.
Phii adeiphia Co.
Postum Ceneal
Public Bervice NJ
‘Texas Guilt Sulphur .
U8. Cast fron Pipe .;
Westinghouse Blec
Woolworth Co. 1s
Ama. & Foreign Powor 45
Columbia Gas .
Biec. Power @ Light
Inter. Tel. & Tel
Ratto
Remington
Univers
‘Texas
Mar., pes
GAS KILLED MAN
Toronto, Oct. 10.—A death from
poisoning by “illuminating gas oc-
curred yesterday. Thomas Martin,
forty, was found dead in his board-
ting house room,
“ho erate
ee ee ee ee, Cn a eee on YORE CURB
(By B® P, Clark & Co. Limited)
Bid Asked
Prod, Ex
Protit Bhar,
Retell Candy
Cities Serv., com,
Lehigh. Pow. Seon...
Natl. Pow, Lite
Otle—
ee
Gilenrock
Conti On
Nobie Ol
Pennock Ot
Ryan Cons.
Sapulpa
“=
Subeuwnoa
er
sz
Montreal Stocks
(By BK. -P. Clark & Co, Limited) y
Asbestos
Atiantio
> .
Prasilian Traction
nt, com
Do. pret
Can. Cottons
Ca Converters .
Cone. M. & &
Detréit
Pom.
Dora
Dom
Dom.
Howard amit
lL. of Woods Mig. .
Lavrentidé Co, :
Mackar Co -
Montreal Power
National Brewertes
Ontario Steel
United
Brid
Ottawa Power oe
Penmana Limited .
Shawinigan ..
Spanish River Pul
Do... pref.
Steel of Can.
win City Belk
pevegpmae | Ew Pulp
= TO-DAY’S EXCHANGE
New York, Oct. 10—Foreign ex-
changes steady. Quotations In cents.
Great Britain — Demand 483%;
cables 484 3-16; 60-day bills on banks
480%.
France —--Demand-.4.66%; -
4.61, X
Italy—Demand 4.00%; cables 4.01.
Belgium—Demand 4.52%.
Germany—Demand 23.80.
Hollané—Demand 40.1
Norway—Demand 19.90.
~Sweden—Demand 26.79.
__TDenmarl—Demand 24.15
Switzerland—Demand 19.28.
Spain—Demand 14.34. —
Greece—Demand 1.89.
Poland—-Demand_.1675:
Czechoslovakia—Demand 2.96,
‘ Jugosiavia—Demand 1.77.
Rumania—Demand AB%:
Argentina—Demand 41.37.
14,96.
_. Brazil—Demand
(Le eo 40%.
Winnipeg; Oct. 10.— With unsettled weather over prairies and
bears forced to run te cover their commitments, allgraims recorde
extreme advances to-day, flax leading 514
above Friday’s close.
Wheat closé ranged from 3, to 34% avaies: Oétober closing at
126% ; November 12634; December 12314 and May 127%. The
offerings were light. There were no export acceptances overnight,
All the coarse grains were considerably higher, and there was
only a moderate. business passing.”
flax, only a-small trade was worked.
Despite the record advance in
Cash grains were in excel-
lent demand. Spreads were advanced on wheat 1% to 44 cent per
bushel,
Winnipeg, Oct. "10 (By R. P.. Clark
& Co.)-—Wheat—Short cover: with
good’ totimisaion house wuyiie based
on the unsettled weather, raining in
Alberta with showers forecast for all
three provinces, coupled with very
light offeri forced prices ‘Gonsider-
ably higher to-day and final ftgures,
which were around the top, showed
an advance of 33 to 3% cents in all
futures, The market was a narrow
affair with buying difficult, and
shorts were forced to‘hid prices up in
their..efforta to cover their commit-
ments, There Was no export buying
and the cash or futures, éxporters
stating that no acceptances had been
made overnight. Cables were disap-
pointing with regard to export busi-
ness, saying they could buy wheat
cheaper from re-sellera. In fact Lon-
don stated’ that No, 1 Northern was
still being offered 117 Winnipeg, or
9 or 10 cents under present cash. New
York stated that foreign demand was
It is reported that
the pool are shipping large quantities
overseas unsold and are also selling
to other exporters. and mills,. The
little foreign news that was coming
through this morning reflected the
bearish situation in Europe, indicat-
ing that they are almost Independent
of these markets. Beneficial rains
have been received in India, while
the weather is cold In Argentine with
some danger of frost reported. The
market-ia purely one of weather and
Ts therefore dangerous. We would not
follow advances very far and with all
the short covering that has taken
places This week, the market must be
technically much weaker,
Winnipeg; Oct. 10 (By B.C. Bond
Corporation's direct pit, wire)—
Wheat had a sharp advance with the
bulk of the buying credited to east-
ern professionals. Rain in the Weat
Cased some local short-covering “but
otherwise. there was nothing. bullish
in the news. As long as professional
interest continue to operate so ex-
tensively opinions_on market are of
little use and a conservative position
seems advisable.
Higb
+
iM
132%
127%
tee
Nov
le
Mey
Fe.
>
Oct.
Nov.
Dec
May ass
Bariey
Oot
“Fee
" ; 40;
Jectods 004g recht -~
Bariey—3 CW
. 59% 1 re-
jected,
ri
; treek.” 64%
»
;. track,
Rye—2 CW.
Uplands Golf Club—Memtors of
the Uplands Golf Club are reminded
that a progressive bridge drive will
be held at the clubhouse on Tuesday
evening next, Oct. 18, commencing
at 8.15 o'clock and are requested to
enter their names on notice posted
in clubhouse before Sunday, 6 p.m.,
or notify the secretary. Refreshments
will be served.
Girl Guides.—The general monthly
meeting of the Local Association of
Girt Guides will be held at head-
4tainable. fram
Shorts were the principal traders. =
Argentine Bonds
Offer. Profitable
Investment Chance
‘By CECIL L. H. BRANSON™
(Member R. P.-Clark & Co. Ltd.)
Argentine Vice-Consul for Canada
The Argentine Republic hae the
highest credit rating. of any South
Affierican country and ranks as one
of thé most important food produc-
ing vcountriea_of the: world.
Argentine enjoyed a favorable bal-
ance of trade in 1924 of. $176,000,-
006, the exports being %$976,000,000,
as compared with imports of $300,-
600,000, The per capita wealth of
$1,450, is about fifteen times the per
capita debt of $97, :
The production of wealth in Ar-
gentine has for many\years past been
accelerated by the investment of for-
eign capital in the enterprises and
industries_of_the country The _Iaat
estimate of the amount of foreign
investments proximated $4,000,--
000,000, Reercdiee government and
provincial obligations held abroad.
The bulk of foreign capital “uptil re-
cently haa come steadily from) Great
Britain and since the war the flow
of investment capital from the
United States hae been of the moat
importance,
Argentine bonds tn the London
market are quotedto yield. the.in-
vestor 5 1-8 percent... In the New
York market Argentine external
bonda yield 6 1-8 per cent. Why
should London value these bonds at
guch a premium over the New York
appraisal? Firstly, because London,
with her long experience of Argen-
tine economic and financial develop-
ment, have—wteety judged her trae
eredit rating. In 1891 the Bank of
England appointed a committee to
‘etvire in thre funding -of- Argentine
foreign loans. Secondly, there ox-
iste in’ London an ambargo, tacitly
understood, on all foreign bond ts
sues. This embargo was made by
Governér,. Norman of the Bank of
Engiand on the return of the gold
standard, This embargo forces for-
eign governments to borrow in New
York. Even Australia was encour,
aged to look to New -York for her
needs, The Argentine has had to
refund several maturing obligations
and was ty forced out of
the London market to New York and
in her refunding operations had to
lasue securities calling for 6 per cont
intereat ratea.
It ts obvious that the yield ob-
Argentine. Government
bonds is very good under the exiat-
ing prosperous conditions and the
large derwriters have had to meet
competition among Americans wae
eelvées to land the issues.
In donclusion one must-bs ¢ehaina-
ed that Argentina is a very young
country with all the opportunities
that favored the United States half
a century ago.
Arthur Buckle Joins
Christy Bond House
bond department ‘of R G. Christy
and Company Itmited, to-day an-
quarters on Wednesday, at 5.15 p.m. | nounced that Arthur Buckle will in
A Bank with 900
William
Windsor,
Ont.
Londoa
Hamilton
Toronto
Ottawa
Montreal
Quebec
St Jones 5.
Halifax
ABROAD
branches _
100 Branches
London
New York
Paris
Barcelona
St. John's,
Nfld,
Havana
San Juan
Santo
Dominge
The Royal Bank
of Canada
NEW ISSUE:
City of Vancouver 5% Bonds
PAYABLE VICTORIA
And Other Principal Cities in
Canada
Due April 1, 1965
Price 101 Yield 4.95%
Gillespie, Hart & Todd Ltd.
711 Fort Street
Brosecatse BC.
Phone 2140 -
Government of the Argentine.
~ “fn Attractive
‘Dollar. Bond
External Sinking Fund. ,
6% Gold Bonds, due October 1, 1959,
Denominations $1,000 and $500. Price 98.75.
Yield 6.10% Yoo
These Bonds are the direct obligation of the Argentine
Government with the highest eredit rating: of any of the
.. Sopth American: COUDMICS. jc. cence
a taOMLA UE AE Vining bole
Mundy’s Yating, Aa.
R. P. CLARK & CO. LTD.
Central Building, Victoria, B.C. and at Vancouver, B.C.
“Members: _
Phone ‘5600
~CIEAES Board of Trade, B.C. Bond Dealers’ Association and
--Mictoria Stock Exchange
Phone 6601
Direct Private Wire to All the Leading Eastern Exchangss
future be connected with his depart-
pment.
Mr. Bucklé histor some time been
known in the bond department of
Pemberton & Son.
“With his experience Mr, Buckle
will be a valuable asset to the grow-
ing firm of R: G. Christy and Com-
pany,” Mr. Hatt said.
Guidars’ Training Club — The
Guiders’ Training Club will meet on
Monday, October 12, at § p.m. at
headquartera, Board of Trade Bulld-
ing, Bastion Square. Deputy Com-
missioner Miss Mara will be prea-
ent.
Rummage Sale—A_ Rummage Sale
will take place in St. Mark's Hall
from 2.20 to. 6 p.m. on Wednesday
next. Tea will be served.
STOCK MARKET TRADING
A copy ofthis valuable 60-page
guide, explaining every method
of trading and investing sent
free on request.
Established 1884
KENNEDY & CO.
Members Consolidated
Stock’ Exchange of N.Y.
74 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
Netice to Contractors
Sooke School Addition
SEALED TENDERS, endorsed “Ten~-
der for Addition to Sooke School,” will
ts prestred by the Honorable the Mie:
ister of Public Works up to 12 o'cl
noon of the 16th day of October, 26,
for the addition of a emall classroom to
the Sooke School, in the Esquimait
Electoral District.
Plans, § fication, Contract and
Forms of der may be seen on and
after the 6th day of tober, 1926, and
further information obtained at the
Department of Public Works, Parila-
ment Bulldings. Copies of plans, spect-
ficationa, étc., can be obtained from the
Departmerit ort nage of a deposit of
Five Dollars ($5.00), which will be re-
fynded on return of the plans, etc., in
£604 condition.
The lowest or any tender not neces-
sarily accepted
P. PHILIP,
Deputy Minister and ‘Pubic Works
a
So of Public Works,
‘ariiament Bulldings, Victorta, B.C.
NOTICE IS. HEREBY GIVEN that «
application wili be made to the Legisia-
tive Aseeed bly of the. Province of British
Columbia t mg ite next session uy, The
ulmalt Waterworks Company
tmafter called “the Company") a “di the
Seeportaaer) of the City of Victoria for
Act (to he known aa “The Eequimait
- terworkse Company Winding-up Act,
1923"), bg for the following mat-
ters and powers, namely:
1. Validating the notice of «
tion given by e Water Commiss loner
for the City a rtorla to the Com vm
on August 4,/1025, by which said
missioner ex, ed the rendentalin
of the Company on terms, price, a
conditions named in'‘said notice, a true
copy of which pay be be yy by any
reon on any busifiess during office
ours at the i ge of the Wat wn
miasioner,-at the City
the office, of The Esquimalt
rworks Company, Sayward Bulld-
ing, Victoria, B.C.
2. Declaring that the wntertehten xt
bound by
rope
the Company t4 expropriated,
and taken over b
— to payments
in a notice.
8. Investing the oy of Victoria with
full power and authority to fulfil all the
terms and provisions contained in said
notice, to operate the undertaking of
the Company and to enjoy all franchises,
‘20 te rights, powers, and privileges
‘erred by charter on the Company,
and vesting the same in:the said city on
complétion of payments to the Company.
4. Proviting _ that Pe, Bs nen
powers during, eae parted of ay
the city shal mited to fhe a disposal
of ‘moneys Tight — recover by
legal thst ents Of payments
after three months’ d
ing the "Sompany a rs len.
6.-Providing that on final
the city the Company to
exist, subject to power to 4 final
ae Sine parties éntitled. ~
or the execution of af
conveyances and
the said notice, sub-
y the city referred to
it by
necenenry rants
tna "paste a: See: Se ew unul
of Victoria...
th ie,
of the Compan’
be and te have been
Karing th the cf
font to default f
and to the exere
yp with the
8 Genome” Perenting fall powers
both the Company and the city to Ca
and carry out eames oh agreements
po f Boy a notic of expropriat
ntain
pated at Victoria, B. Septem
1
‘THE ESQUIMALT WATERWORKS
oy 2b HATQATt:
tHE TION. OF “THE. CITY
COnPOT VicroRiA
4
ult, and grant-}
STOCKS BONDS GRAIN.
By direct private wire our office is coniiected with-
— ‘WINNIPEG, CHICAGO, NEW YORK, TORONTO,
MONTREAL
and many other Important poltits. Our ‘comnprehensive sebvioe
including the facilities of these connections enable our clients to
buy or sell to the best advantage.
British Columbia Bond Corporation Ltd.
VANCOUVER VICTORIA NANAIMO
Direct wire connection to all Eastern Exhanges
DEAL WITh
R G CHRISTY“CO.us
cTroRIA BC
$25,000 Government of Newfoundland 54% Bonds
Dut Ist July, 1942
Price 103.36, Yield 5.20
WE ‘HIGHLY RECOMMEND THESE BONDS
R.G. CHRISTY & CO. LTD.
INVESTMENT BANKERS
Phones 875 and 614 Times Bldg. 628 Fort St, Victoria, B.C,
Daily Quotations on Mining Stocks
Premier, Dunwell, Terminus, Victoria, Etc., Ete.
J.G. GREENWOOD
106 Yates Street Finance, Stocks and Bonds Phone 2123
8
NEW YORK COTTON
i (By R. P. Clark &
Real Estate and Insurance
Mining Stock Bought and Soild
C-S; MARCHANT
Phone 8674 129 Pemberton Bidg.
Merritt Mines Limited
(WPL)
Small capitalization, large hold-
ings, high assay, copper, gold
and silver; will start shipping
and pay dividends shortly,
Shares Now—15¢
THOMAS KING & CO.
LIMITED
610 Hastings W.
Or Your Broker
w
1025, for the oon-
struction of leper huts at Lasaretto on
Bentinck Island, B.C.
Plans and specification can be seen |
and forms of tender obtained at the
offices of the Chief Architect, Depart-
ment of Public Works, Ottawa; th
ent Archi ae, Dept. Public Works,
Victoria, B.C., and the Clerk of Worka,
oe Public Works; Vancouver, B.C,
‘enders will not be conside: unless
made on the forms supplied by the De-
partment 4 in accor
conditions set forth t
Each tender: must be accompanted by
ah accepted cheque on a chartered bank,
parable te the order of the Minister ot
lio Works, equal to 19 p.c. of the
amount of the tender. Bonds of the
Dominion of Canada and bonds of the
Canadian National Railway Company
will Giao be Bocepted as security, or
bonds abd a cheque if required to make
up an odd amount.
By order,
8. E. O'BRIEN,
Papertnest of Public Works
teawa, October 2, 1925,
UTILIZE TIMES WANT ADS
Vancouver
4
NOTICE
PRIVATE BILLS
worms IS HEREBY GIVEN that the
time limited by Rule of the House
for receiving petitions will expire on
Wednesda: @ lith day of November,
1925, Private Bills must be presented
to the House on or before Monday,
23rd day of Noveriber, 1926. Suerte
from Standing or Select Committees on
Privaté Bile must be received on or
before Monday; the 80th day of Novem«
ber, 1925.
W. H. LANGLEY,
Clerk, Legislative Assembly,
BUY BONDS
WE OWN AND OFFER:
West Vancouver
514% Bonds
$ 3,600.00 due January 1, 1945.
$39,900.00 due July 2, 1945,
$16,000.00 due July 2,.1950,
< ALL YIELDING 5.30%
1: “Denominations, $100, $500, $1,000™
WEST VANCOUVER is one of the most ‘substantial aad
best managed Municipalities in the Province.
They have a surplus in Sinking Fund over Government re
quirements of $19,797,
Ms have no hesitation“in recommending these bonds”
Price 102.41
Price 102.44
Price102.75.
BUCKY HARRIS. DIDA'T
WANT TO Give Mec A
Jop BuT WHen = TOLD
“HINA WASP AMIN
{THe SUN Fierd HE
SIGNED ME
Re eee a = YIOTORIA-DATLA- SIMS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925 ‘ at i a Ae NRE
.
—“TELL IT WELL ; AND YOUR AD-
THIS 1S A TAGHT
GAME: THe SCORE
IS.NOTHING TO NOTHING
IN THE NINTH AWD bucte
TS wttH mee > A BALE
AIN'T BEEN_HIT oVT
Here THs AFTER Noon:
Vittoria Baily Times |
Advertising. Phone No. 1090
RATES FOR CLASSIFTED ADVERTISING
H"
Wanted, T9} 15}
etc:,
Situations Vacant
Rent
dibe- pes wond.pesAnsertlon..oniract, tater) Soe
en application.
No
mum on
Situations
Articles for Sate, Lost-or Found } thts
} mighe,
less than
id
advertisement
for
words,
A
“+B
prie
imber of
tr
sputing the number of words tn an
t. estimate groups of ee oF
as one word. Dollar
pom
ns count ne
as oD
s who so desir
Plies addressed to a box at The
fice and forwarded to their priv
CT Ret ttre ete tre tite eee te
Te
ate address. ‘
—»
jJewe!
Birth Notioes,. 61,00 per insertion
of Thanks and
sertion
Mar
In Memoriam
and F
ringe, Card
fi 50
Notices
per tr Death Re
$1.50
two insertions
Births, Marriages, Deaths |
~~--_------ + bi
sneral
mera
for one.insertion, $5.60 for |
wu
IN MEMORIAM ‘
In Satu
ish ho
RIC BM AM-
h
ase
Te
ving mem
Richard
the
and
within ve
know him w to love
Till death » solr
Inserted by bie Wid
hire
ow
Sooo pot
we 2s ‘ mS [aera rersernerent te ween Peer err t? a ee
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
ANDs FUNERAL CO
Quadra Street
night
tt
reasons
regen
No charge for use of pri
Tresicle
Offices Phone
stat
B.0. FUNERAL CO. LTD.
(Hayward s} Bat. .1867
784 Broughton Street
Attended All Hours
Charges Lady Attendant
Shipment Specialty
Calls to at
Moderate
Embaiming for
Phones: 2256,
McCALL BROS.
(Pormerty of Calgary, Alta.) thin
E
MM"
tree
Weat
of the
h our
© Floral Funeral Home of" the
6 are Winning the confidence
people of Victoria and vicioity thr
methods of conducting our bustness.
FF
Cor. Vancouver and
Phone 383
Office and Chapel.
Johneon Sta
The Thomson
Funeral Home
1626 Quadra St, Next to Firet Presb}terian
Shurch
ence, just as in any other profes-
po gekenery mightily Remember that
when you require the services of a funeral
@irector. - You tan reset assu that the
gervice which we offerte one -which-oaly
years of perfecting could acht
Ss
expe
err
I
pin
Brid
L*
good
thar
TEWARTS MONUMENTAL WORKS
LIMITE Oftiog and yard, corner
May and Eberts Streets, near Ce ¥.
Phone 4817. ,
—— ooo
COMING EVENTS
L IGGONISM—"An example of tactiess-
ness is that of the lady who asked
@ Ddeauty specialist to give her a ftqw
wrinkles” Diggon's, printers... stalioners
end engravers, i410. Government mist
Headauarters for greeting cardn Dig-
gon private Christmas cards are better
than r—order now. 5
to-night
A MILITARY
- 1239, Government Street;
600,
qentotes
MONUMENTAL WORKS
National
yn
io4
r
SIT
at 8.30,
prizes
Ot<1-86
good
Awe TUAL Hallowe'en masquerade,
< ween Alexandra Review Maccabees
cnseaberior “CRieMeres, Cvrmper Fe Hany
Haudsome coxtume and
prigen. Serpentine and
oe. Tickets Tic.
NALEDONIA, Saturday, for a good time
a t FParey and bis bunch have been
‘og fer lent four weeks mu
Charleston.” Ladies free,
tom-
balloon
profi
2691-2
im. ply
ANCE to-night, Chamber of Com-
merce, at £30, management Mra
gimpson. Ray Kinloch’s 4-plece orcneetra
ANCE, Lake
S684-1-5 1-56
I tober 14,
‘ Dancing 9-1.
$00,
recline =
ANCE, Saturday night, Chamber of
)) Commerce, at $,30, Management —
i Inloch’s 4-plece orches-
sacl = mee eT
i
PSTERS Wine Drive ng
Hill, Wednesday, .Oc-
Art” Farev's orchestra.
Refreshments, 1
Baturday, af
Tws $5.00; two. $2.00;
8:20, Tiroad Street.
two $1.00,
2704-1-56
L* :
Nt ins
NGINEERS
te
Ss
School,
aE SLi
SITUATIONS WANTED—MALE
—oee”
alid.
Act E
olner fastest netic Ts
already making five dollars up datty,
spare time, experia
aS
ry. Garreteon Company, Brantford. GREEBMENTS and mortgages purchased
rio. . 218 a Money to lean. Foot & Manser, Rar-
risters, Bank of Nave Scotia Bide.
5 he SALE RN eeaker ne Wake
tion;
COMING EVENTS
(Continued)’
RRIVING
teed large
Cah in agason.
ates
WATS
Ssusage
é
ELLO,
KID!
alac
nh Thursday
on
AY
thréé=ploce hest ther rr
Ww on't-
nig
tre, dance;
n-d r-f-u- i
and, »a
buy »
tite CORD WOOD
Surnace - weed,
is _¢ so We ‘ .
aE THERE TPMT, © pererprnr AP nti r er
Oct.1i thik
BEAUTIFUL E
KE ILLLL Women s-lasiiiuse
undred, Monda
milbtary 4
9 volumes
$69.60. Apply
RN THB “CHARLE PAnY.
uryes’s row P + >
Thursda \
A arriage
$65, onap $2
er
B® K, $1
> brik
fT MAKTIN FIX rt—Watches, clocks, rk Chimne ‘
Jewelry repatred to satiety. Turon in|! ategt, ir °
- or
Mialch 15s nes one i a ASene ety
608 Fort Street
TURAL HISTORY Beers for
va Monda >. grown
Put
Head
TRC
4%
ornament
ler,
erawer
Gordon
E' x
Andrew's and; 4 exc
Thure
Me
meeting of St
nian Society on ne 61
— EF R SALE
ERE w no dance
night ”
K CHARLE
Brition
Brought
rday 7
E
at the
SALE
Tar
SALE
por
Fuesht
wuppites shrimps.
(Winston's)
English),
workma
Ing ffowerlng hoe
tt WONDER WHOS
-ASLeer? THe PLAYERS
ARE YELLING FOR
SOMe QIN: Do CATCH
The
DAILY
Tudor Sedan
extras,
one
1925.
A
balloon, tires ca |
big saving to som
al
includin,
like, new
F SPENDABLE
T
Askey s Piah }
at
ups, every extra posslb)
wheels and trunk We Deliese an¢
Will agree this is the nicest Ford
sbe-tn Victoria. and going at-only $650
A janda,.4, iate model. nice haps
Vvertendsmodets 90," alt good, each, $295)
Chevrolet 4.90 $278)
Chevroter-¢-90 $158}
A._W. CARTER |
@uper Six and Eseex Motor Care)
Gordon-and. Courtney Sts Phoue £46 |
‘HEV 490 19170, 78.)
Nash 450 " eon |
Six $550; Dodae. 5-
neor Arrow. ®
Daneenger electric jight
our
648
sausal
Fort
ints
(next)
2695~26-115
3
1033
of yor!
ensh. |
city
neyelopaedia set
for $20
daot
24 Winch Bide. Rucook
e+ or
ike. new
cost 5.passsoger
-pansenger
passenget
$250, Pierce
mo 48,
folding
ode!
PARTS
Retck- Hudson Super six
Dodge, — Chev Gray.Dort.
Pesto, Faxon, —Overtard
Chalmers, Winton, Hupmobile:
Knight and many others
ACIFIC AUTO WRECKING Co UTD
941 View Street Phone 3336
Ask for “Junkie”
PARTS
fireplace and man ‘
Humber
EBTO=ITT Steewety
Cousins
rket, and
need bulb }
Road,
24-87
a oat
Ruby
Mr
FREE
onerating *
swn the seven
prices to. those
pay the cost
othe
ears
arked 4
iginal
the
We have
care below
that should
of operating for
febaker
»
POR
Jack Pascoe, who has beer
* tn
successfully
admitted
Fr R USED
C. Hardware
2 LANES ORO
2677-38-85 1 ' od
the
be free
that thé. New
dance -is best
ALLEABLE
comfort at Hameteriey ' per
nees Veranda com. selas Street “
na warmed, Serenatiers QE! tABLE >
ra ev Wedne and
ate parties catered to
e Keath < tf
atc tl =
HELP WANTED—MALE
and week
men
anu
Adve
INTLEMEN'S
B
Prices
SHAY
for
Itmite
The
wort!
rean Hox
with
his
in 3
will Investiqate
Tim vd=87
oking future
Test
man who
while
$61
schooled
Winterburn,
for certificates.
eortis
226 Central
Ww. G.
‘ thousar
I¥-40, wanting fuet wha
sitions, $115 to sell
tr ogation, experience
Wr ree Supt, Ties
MEN
=N you are}
age
Office
t “ert Fiortda innd
00
wante ~- -
LTERATIONS
repaired
Estima
AWN MOWERS
ened, saws fil
Phone 146
Le 1 a
Te ' enn
nnecessar} Write
ftealty €o Northeast
Miam| : 1
NDERS
piece
or payments
ten
yal
Lhd
three-
ri
710
wanted
on two
qualified
music? also Canadian
ne, giving figures,
orth Park Street
and
to ay
ish a
In
e
549 8 shape” Phone
atone Avenue.
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
@o p
DIS wanted to
sowing at hale, Whole or spare time
pay Work sent any t
ces paid. “Send stamp for
Manufacturing Co
“Advertiaihe
nm and light as steam is
part JOIN
Mor
sing Salon, expert
$34 appointments
sérl-2
B Peat y Maird
erators. Phone
Woo roar 2
that
EC «2 has
classes for
a caminatione New
Hibben-Bone Ballgiog, Be
Bervice
0
210 muc
for
Viet
thet
wilt
you want # corneas phone See. of do
Local Unten. 72191. tt mue
more
with
our
lp.
VATIONS, WANTEO—FEMALE
os
MPETENT —nuree—going —Bast_trom
Calgary Nov, 1 would accompary in-
Compensation, transportation. Box
Times. 2508=6-88
ean
AGENTS
NTS—Why work for others? Manu-
facture atito = poli#h gas
Yourself, tremendous
Ask details, General mister Sup-
LaCrosse, Wisconsin. 2707-1-86
Co. Con
Multigraph and -Mtnreo
Postcards,
Bh oong ‘Gone for
‘orelgn
WANTED—AGENTS
wr
guite 24, Winch Building.
—PRIVATE Christ
sample book fr: men and wom:
MONEY
¢ of capital unneces-
RADIO =
-.$1.908. 21,
tubes, phones;
Phone
tery.
excellent
cheap.
a
nebsY, at
2642-1-9
SALE — Track sot!
io poles
RANGE BARGAINS
ondition
orner
AD
[ mating
ver Island >
facturers
n undelivered mal
de of readers will most iikely
a reasonablé price
MISCELLANEOUS
Established 1968
HAMBER OF
COMMERCE
an
organization
done
An
organization
No
orgsnization
thrive
without
fneniberatitp. =
Advertisement Writers and Advertising”
tts
dae
Overland 45
Russell-Knight
Overland 85-6
MeLau@hiin
Overland 4
Overland 85-6
ww oF
THOS. PLIMLEY
Bedan
718 Fort Street
serene weer
$39.50 Jack's
Johnson and Bl
-
LIMITED
Broughton St Phone 657 Victoria, B.C
and
racks. bla
Limited, $70
xb RANGES, |
1M
LOOK THESES OVER
Dodge Tourin
18) Ford ‘oupe .
Viectorta and 2 Chevrolet Special
mes, busihess men. | 1923 Ford Touring
a) omplete
r Hers.
thro
Epe
Spectal
Meteo of
whotesa
Cana
mat-
(oatad
Winck Bide. Phone
ate
Terms Arranged to Sulit
A £
Purchaser
smhant
JEUMPHRIES MOTORS LIMITED
ttising Agence
™ = —— ee a
In 2 for
vie
very
OLYMPIC GARAGE
Corner Wharf and Broughton Streets
Paid—We Ce D*
Fort
VB YOURSELF
Hour Phone 2246
CARS, $1.00 Per
Street
@ look- RARGAINS IN GOOD CHEAP CARS
I FORD Touring; spindid tires, car
go anywhere, for only 15
Roadster. in good condition $75
GREY-DORT Bpectal, motor tust
completely overhauled, for only $150
1919 GREY-DORT, In first-class cond!
tion an00
199 good
for
379
ed here, why not
Someone amon. with
ORD
ooking for and be clad o
tt44
OVERLAND
and car
$6, new p
In good con
nt,
tion.
carpentry . three-speed
nly $60
cadater (Master
Rix), tn »le running of
This is an exceptional buy at '
TAIT.& McRAE
933 Yates St
Dealer
_ 1693
put
1867
“te Oakland
w Glad.
tf
Emery
NORD OWNERS—WWe are now ready to
tnetall the “Nelson superior steering
with concealed horn wires and other
nents for new and old type steer-
have a demonstration
? Garage. corner Vancouver
and View Streets. Phone 276. Patented
in U.B. and Canada 2229-t£
1s
te
to business
machinery.”*
THR
GENUINE BARGAINS GUARANTEED
Cadiliac &, like new ..
Hudeon Super Stx ..
Oldsmobile, in perfect shape
Overland Touring. new Baktory
Overland Roeadater 100
| Used Parts for Chevrolet. Oakiana ana Ford
CAPITAL BERVICE GARAGE
Fort Street
h |
orta.
h | S950 FORD Touring car, 1921 model,
completely overhauled, ly
painted, good tires rea! bargain, guar-
anteed by ws, Take It out and try dt,
you li-be more than pleased,
NATIONAL MOTOR €0O. LIMITED
Ford Dealera
$91 Yates st.
NEWTON
ADVERTISING
AGENCY
OR SALB—At
Roadster,
car will
and easy terms.
and 7.30 p.m.
a bargain, Franklin
two-seated model ‘This
give @ lot of service; $40 down
Phone T1I65L between 6
-tt
tras
rs h Se hew 4 Lat-
remein, ling.
Local, Dominion and
Publications
Phone 1
-———_—$_
1D Baie BUY a second-hand ear until
you sre our values. Here are two,
and ‘we have others priced sccordingly:
Dodge 1923; -engine-orerha’
ber, new paint_and new battery
Hupmobile, excejfent mechanical
jon
TO LOAN
¥ie-
te-38
500, $2,590, ps
CONSQLIDATED -MOTORS(VICTORIA
968 Yates Street,
Ps were.
Fn Fo Neon reser Ras ee a
lve 1
ups ierevemeriel:
SEER Aramis abe:
(Copyright 1925. By H.C. Fisher,
Trade Mark Reg. in Canada).
epyrigm. 19th by MC Fisher) «
BOATS
NYLINDER grinding, motorboat
+ motorcar repetre.—merine
Armetrone Bros. 144 Kingsten
pairs, etc,
is
etoria eat.
|
F YOU DO NOT SEE what you are toate 4
* 8300) tne for advertised here, why nat Kdvere
} tive your wants? Somacns amobaal .the.,
2—486... Chevrolet——"Fourine runs, thousands of readers. wii) most likely hare:
=f), | Just what you: are
ery good an¢ ir
Ty good and has new tires, $250 oH atm renaune’
Easy
AUTOMOBILES
(Continued)
and}
weave, @tc_,
Btteet
eu {TEED CARS at
VARANTEED (CAR TEPHENS' Yacht and Boat Works. Ke- |
2—BXTRA 1337 Sunnyside avenue, |
GooD BUYS?
490 Chevrolet
Ceptionatly nee
at ..
N a.
aN Yy
Touring, In ez-
condition
Terms Arranged
EDUCATIONAL
LL SPROTT
A partments
} night—echeet
MASTERS MOTOR CO. LIMITED SHAW (Commercial
of instruction except
twhich reopens september!
22) are how operating. and new puplie are|
being a@mitted each Monday ROCK-
LANDS ACADEMY (Collegiate) Fall term
| begins September 8. Telephone 28 or 804
Tor ‘JeEmes It Beatty stan
S36 Fates 8+ tor of Quatre Fhene 112
LORTHAND
meretal sub
our recommen
| Millan
School, 1611 Gov't Cc
ects, Buccessful gradu
dation 314. Eo A.M
‘or
A La
HUMPHRIES MOTORS
LIMITED
‘79 6
Yates Street
DGB TOURING
OVERLAND TOURIN
GRAY-DORT Tot
McLAUGHLIN ROADSTER!
TON TRUCK erhauled
ERNLE MILI GARAGE
Cars Bought sold
Ste
MUSIC
RURY PRYCE
Dougian Street
PIANO lessons 560, veginners or a.
vanced Clapsical or popular music,
accompaniments. Success guaranteed. Box
2292, Timea. 2292-26-93
Violin mudio,
Phone -1444,
and
rage
5 View
ana matting cirevlare to
ear owners, We have names «
Greases of Victoria and
auto owners. Newton Advert!
Bulte 24, W Bide
VHEV ROL 7
regmid it!
terms
DORESStING
ae
MOTORCYCLES AND CYCLES
seconf-hand
Bose vs
ve “tsi we wrreet,
Street
« Agency
from
1916. det-16
a1 |
tow w EatePtty
our
Apply excellent
FORD Road
the &
give terms
nes
‘ohatance
ster, be
ft on
requir
TO LET—MJSCELLANEOUS
I OF
.
tien
Aut
SALE
ne overha
150 cash
Paint Shop
5-passenger
Ned
Chevrolet SEVENRAI
‘ tices
Land &
Mehted and wel
the Jones © Bu
eatmont Agency
in
Chevrolet,
real
runs
owner
2686
buy
TEW trucks, used
trailers, Thos
Broughton Street.
69
trucks,
Pimiley
Victoria, B.C
ms Limited
Phone
] TAN, McINTOSH, HIBHEnSON
rIMBER COMPANY
Timber cruisers, valuators and
International School, | eheineers Timber for sale in
View Rtreet tf|amall tracte—Crown grant or
— ~ ee == | SRY part of the Province
\ JANTED—4 Care and trucks for Wreck. | + ee! Victoria.
ing; be prices paid W. Frank
Cameron Wrecking Coe 949 View Street
16
Phon F ‘
1920 ? ra Tourtrg, condition
Owner leaving elty and
must sacrifice; terma it
Phane
61821. TArL-36
BLAIR
LIMITED-
onsulting
larke and
license-—in
108 Belmont |
43/5
YOOD tires cheap, alt sizes.
selection ts good.
Come while
POULTRY AND LIVESTOCK
R= prices paid © poultry Seaview
Poultry Farm, 422 Dallas Road Phone |
6260.
ir
price
In Al
the
desired
TOR erdon setter
eves, &
T7793.
ro SAl B team
ness
and wagon, ant
Phone Colquits
LOST AND FOUND
hunts
$2
months
P hone
Gorge Road
Owner can have same
000-3-48
2710
POUND reel én
longing tc dy
by phoning 19972
POUND—A
Victoria
if -not
be- One
incut
Gene
if IVE poultry wa
} 44 1407 Lang Bir
collect
DULLETS
lent
horns, $20
or.
Stor
herring, net drifting
Apply
near
at 622 Manchester
claimed “after 10 dare will
$7-3-90
~ Poultry,
Phone 1334 We
raza}
andottes, an |
Road
be sold
I O8T—Labra
4 Phone 3152
I OBT-—Poasibty
4
or Fou! Bay
muff Finder
tin °
at, $3.80
Mullard
bitch
Mila
answers to
405
Neil
Michigan
20-1-88
on Goveramemt-Montreal
Road, fe fur tall from
ane phone 3596, 2686-2-87
laupdigy
on Wilkinson
Read and
Reward for
Wy
each; -22 Les: |
Shelbourne
exer
719-1-88 |
\
PULLETS
YANTED, of any breed, tn any quantity
Hillside Poultry, 1407 Lang Street
1534 O2~4-86
Phone
2 $1.15
eh Street
10%
rs
last
Road
Went
return.
I ‘Ost: ~tne- bundie
4. September
tween Burnside
Royal Oak
2677, Times.
week,
be.
Read
Leghorn pullets
Mullard; Shelbourne
for sale
] OST—Lady's Bweater, Rrey. on Sunday,
4 Oct. 4, at Russell's Btation, Victoria
T625L, Reward
——oOoOoOOoooooooooaeaeaea————— |}
DOGS AND CATS
Weat; phane
2T40.2-88 | —~~—~-—
FOR SALE—Irish water
water dog and will
34.40 carbine rifle
NAKEN by
pair gia
spaniel,
retries
Phone 74
good
also a||
2666-3
UNFURNISHED HOUSES
oR RENT—Coitage, 772 Topas Avenue,
large lot. Prone 1168 A. A. Hum-
ahh Oe 1942-t¢
“and modern garage to rent.
Drive, wear Bowker Avenue
Phone 3200 2552-3- LL |
po RENT—¢-room House, James Bay; }
phone 4042 after 4 pom :
over
i) RENT—Six-room house with ga
iA car line, Baquimait
mistake from The Beehive,
en in cane. Please
BUSINESS CHANCES
A GOOD all round opportunity for man
4 With small capital to invest, aw active
Partner in 6 real moneysmakin
profits. Hep
phone y L os 2694. Time
PERSONAL
e
ber.
oomyY.
Beach
90
NUT. THIS OUT FOR LUCK
/ date and 10¢ for
scope of your. entire life.
be Grand Central Station,
ADAME H.
peychologist
RIVATE lessons «tf
ence. Phone 1319
Send
wonderful _hore-
Prof. Raphael,
New York
= we BAO
NICHOLA, palmist’ and
Phone 1319R for ap-
2hTe-tt
on silent infiu-
2298-00
birth ae.
Phone
2893-3-S5
FURNISHED HOUSES |
COMPLETELY ‘furnished — six-room
house, plano. excepting lineh and
silver all. modern conveniences, Nero
good garden; 6 minutes from da uu
19; a; 886m monthly. Phone S772L2. Fos-2.55
Cota Fe .¥ _ furniabed r-room
eottag®, Poul Bay; phone 26th, -
76.2-89
A
WANTED—MISCELLANEOUS
LD artificial teeth bought, any condi-
tion... Highest prices sent by return
KR. Dunstan, Box 340. Vancou-
B.C. Established 33 years. a
PRIVATE party wants kood used office
furniture and equipment.
Times,
W TANTED—Small
price. Phone
p clock. .
fi
mall
ver,
FURNISHED SUITES
~~
ELD APARTMENTS — Furnished
Saat sat te rent by the week or month.
19830- 41-20
Feeount “APARTMENTS
three-room suites to . rént.
gramophone,
6046 «=6not = after 6.
3<1-87
ark, tw Fairfield. close to” car
000-3-8¢ | beach. Phone a307xX, ‘Adults.
~~
oF Se eee
DATA Cet sem an am a me
PORTLAND
hot
$3.50
YyVANTED
in Oak Bay
AY
Times
Re ACCORD,
board
4662.
Car cane
y. Week or month
peciaity
a6
Phone
R
p*
AL - NISHED
POR
gre
itving-re
} room
pantry
close to
terme
56 *
tractors ana TIMBER =
Stadacona
far
| TIMES SUBURBAN SHOPPING
BASKET
HILLSIDE . QUADRA
r MARKET
Market,
all ‘parts of cit
ue MILTON
Autemo millinery—
Jate made
underwear and hoslery
Saturday evenings untit-?-v'tieck
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
BOOKS
ec
DEAVILLE, Prop.
4
Winter rates,
and cold
per week.
HOTEL, 723. “Yates Street. te
Housekeeping
water, steam heated fm |
roqma, |
WANTED—TO RENT
"ANTED
ware
For
me
Pr
Times.
To rent,
*., not less than
WwW
Sentratry
sirable tenants
feven
ROOM AND BOARD j
close tn
son a diet «a
Sunnybree,
$46 Princess.
furnishes
months.
Teeter, ts Yt
ne 6
unturniah
on south side Oak Bay
elant
rooms. Box 69, |
o00-tf
~~
Room and
moderate
rooma.
als opti
home c
Burdett P |
2204-
UNEDIN
Bedrooms,
146.
and board,
art
oom:
sht
FURNISHED ROOMS
LHI
and
HOT
bedroo
aka
faree
re
half-a
shoer
in elty
niment
ECIAL
large
BUNC
rooms
m panele
white
basement
Fe by
Bagehawe
ename
ac
SURES BUIL ? on INSTALMENT PRAN
for
contractor.
@ 1140.
ODBRN
dD. Tt
homes
Bate.
Phe
ACREAGE
ROOMS,
housekeeping
close to dr
Phone
ROOMS
619 Yates Street
front
breakfast if
Hosp!
wosmaace
e excellent
on 5150
ayments
Appty-tts-Port-Street
49 «6Fort Str
suites.
wt
and
sR1
Housekeeping
fortwo
destred
3-55
bedroom
sale, easy
» Fort
terms.
and
ui
CHANCE—Quarter-
Lake |
terma. $5.
no interént; |
6069-«¢
nou
to $230
of 35
FARM LANDS
ANT
ranch
particul
D>
for
re
sale
MEAT
NATLOR M
livery to
OAK BAY
Avenue and
© order:
a
OHN T
To hear from owner of
¥
co.,
Fell
felts.
Exchange, Ubdrary.
Phone 1737.
SSS
BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS
NYTHING is
bullding
phone 1783, Roofing
Thirkell
ee
price
corper Oak Bay]
erect New
velours, velveta
and children's
hone $474. Open
w
B.C. Book
$13 Government St.
or = repaire,
worcialty, ‘T.
ts
CARPET CLEANING
Co, 927 Fort.
LD carpets made Into beautiful,
SLAND “Window art Carpet Cleaning’
Phone 3816.
Hughes. Hamilton-Beach method,
sott,
“fwett" rugs, Carpeteria Co, 921 Fort
Btreet
Phone 1455. “ee
Eee
OYEING AND CLEANING
ITY DYE WORKS—Geo. McCann, pro
prietor.
844 Fort. Phone 75.
ENGRAVERS:
Green Block, 1216
os
(Generac ENGRAVER,_SteneN Canter
and Seal Bngrayer:
a
irda St
Geo. Crowther,
« OPP. |]
FoR Sap SA ki LY Pe
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
(Continued) *<
FLOOR SURFACING
a
Oo”. floors made new, new floors made
perfect, by Floor Surfacing: Machine
Phone 1659L. Aspinwall & Harmon w
eee
FURNITURE MOVERS -
sonetiting
BOUT TO MOVE? |If so, see Jeeves &
« Lamb Transfer Co. for household
moving, Seating. packing, shipping or stor.
age. Office phone 1567, night 254611.
GOAT DAIRY
Gores milk delivered
qvelity guaranteed.
eneer Goat Dairy,
10¢ per . pint,
hone 7095R.
233 Langford Street.
INSURANCE
SS en
ihe, Aute—end._ Accident Inaur.
anew. fen Line @ Preser: -614i.24-68
|. MILLINERY
—~
MART. .hate made t
lessons given.
——
order, reoévating;
Miss (Crossen. 6071.
2463-54-108
_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—————$—$———<—————— oF
PAINTERS AND DECORATORS
SPARKS BROS, painting and paper.
Roofs r@matret;): any kt
te Gorn Streel” Pv!
PATENT ATTORNEYS
————5
MLCE.. registered
attorney, 615 View Stre
Y BOYDEN,
* patent
Phone 916
PLUMBING AND HEATING
E. HASENFRATZ
A. ing, repairs all
Phone 674, ree 447%
KING, James Bay
$83 Toronto
inatatied, ra
Piumbing,
Kinds, 1046
plumber "Phesis
Street. Gasoline
es ‘Connected, Proms
REAL ESTATE AND. INSURANCE
STMB
Phone 125.
SASH AND DOORS. ~
Ww ‘F. DRYSDALE
* doors and mill
Park Street ;
ce )MPANTY Sash,
work. 1033 North
Phone 642 1716-tf
SCAVENG
Victoria SCAVE
Government Street
ING
NG co,
Phone 662.
SHOE REPAIRING
A ARTHUR HIBBS, ploneer shoe
bel patrer Work at! reduced prices
Compare work and wear. Calgary Bid
fil Fort Street ‘
SHOWCARDS AND POSTERS
MeMILLAN,
View Bt
1470
201 Union Bidg.,
612
Showcards, Posters, E
TURKISH BATHS
cheetah teeter eerie ce ee
R™ AIBVE that tired feeling by a Turkish
Bath
or, Violet “Ray — treatment.
Madam Minnic, 729 Yates St. Phone 1784.
\RYSTAL GARDEN—Turkish and mae
FiciaP oaths y PB the Abit: oy
T366-26-97
ESSE
TYPEWRITERS
P[tPewRitTeRs -New and secondhand,
repairs, rentals; ribbons for all: m,
chines ited, Typewriter >. Limite
70¢ Fort Street. Victoria. Phone 2798. 59
WOOD AND COAL
3BRS WOOD
5265R1
Best grade
vice,
RS WOOD Co-—=Phones “2086 oF
Millwood from Island mili,
water, Better than cord-
@ load and be convinced.
2265-52-118
CO.—Phones 2064 oF
Millwood from Sidney milla
Biggest load. Try our ser-
2266-52-116
been
basement.
2347-
WINDOW -CLEANING
eee eee
WINDOW AND CARPET
CLEANING CO.
Pioneer Firm
H HUGMES
TP-ISLAND
water
235R
dry millweod,
ready
never
to put In
ISLAND
w
Fort Street
Phone 's
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
BARRISTERS
FOOT & MANZER
Barristers, Solicitora, Notaries, eto
Members of MANITOBA, ALBERTA ané
BRITISH COLUMBIA BARBS. Phone 316,
Bank of Nova Scotia Bidg., Victoria, B.C.
CHIROPRACTORS
H. HM. LIVSEY, D.C., Sp.C., Chiropractia
Specialist, 312-3 Pemberton Build.
ing. Phone i. Consultations and spinal
aneivaia fr we
AUL C. LONG, D.C.
berton Bidg. Phone 1383,
$53 St. Patrick, Phone ¢755X2
SS—ooeeeoehe=~@a—— eS
DENTISTS
Ph.c,, 128 Pem-
Realdence
cd
I R. A. A. HUMBER, dentist, Gas and
oxygen, Hours by appointment. 1208
Pemberton Bidg. Phone 2148. tt
p*® J. F. SHUTS, dentist. Office, Ne.
202 Pemberton Bids. Lj
Phone’ 11
RASER, DR. W. F., 201-2 Stobart.
Pease Block.’ Frene 0G
tos p.m.
MATERNITY HOME
eee
By ee NURSING HOME, 708
¥ Cook, Mra E. Johnson, C.K. p
uv
vr
9z6
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
Bh Vi B. TATLOR, general practice
Spsrtes. attention or Ser oa OE Pons,
the eye, nose and
bertos "Building. Prone, $6
Bis — Ase.
ote rege Pattee.
‘
apd
wit
io
VICTORIA DAILY. TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925
REAL ESTATE HOUSES, LOTS a
By DWIG
we
4
ED LOCATION
OF OAK BAY CHEAP AND GOOD
SXCELLENT | Siz-room Bouse, very
4 warm and cofmfortable. with bath-
room; garage and vhicken houses. Halt
were of good land, cultivated; three miles
out. Price, $1,300.
A0HN GREENWOOD
1254 Govertiment Street Telephone 757
[Be 2 SORE
yt an approach off ~ private road,
we have for sale one of the most
ettractive bungalow homes to be found in
this high-¢iass residential district. There
ere 6 very large, bright rooms, containing
every modern comfort and conventence,
iuetuding
WELL-LAID HARDWOOD FLOORS
furnace, wash tubs, vermin-preof store-
rooms and many special featares, A de-
ightful garden (lot 102x104 ft), well-
stocked with all kinda of shrubs, fruits
and flowers, adds to the attractiveness of
the property, This will appeal to anyone
looking for a really unique house with a
homelike appearance and will appreciate
the emeeptional value at
ONLY 67,000
PRICE ONLY $000
©OS¥ COTTAGE
EXTKA LARGE LOT. TAXES ONLY
4. FRUIT TREES
JBT TOOLS,
by 150 ff...
IDEAL HOMESITE
ITUATER’ on high ground with view
of Straits atid mountains, 10) acres.
Be0d aotl, easily cleared. only ¢ miits from
elty,. close te paved road., This must be
Ohh Bo fret EPP ieANt ON ORK r—r™ "
TYSON & WALKER
620 Wort Bireet Phane a
WHY PAY, RENT WHEN
YOU CAN PURCHASE
THIS LOVELY HOME
WITH A SMALL CASH PAYMENT?
¢)4= BAY—Situated on St, Patrick
Street, « six~room ~—semi-bungsiow
with basement, furnace, open —_ place.
bullj-in effects and a good 3-plece bath-
room. The location is onthe nicest part
of the street and close to Oak Bay car
line,. Full size lot apd the taxes are low.
hate nine Ate
and « cemfortadle two-
room cottage, Just off the paved road and
wt good transportation facilities, close
to store, church and school, water laid on;
good woodshed; ten large fruit trees in
,
PT ___C__ |}
ONLY $4,750
Like a lighthouse on a rocky|™°: "AND # IXNESTMENT AGENCY
shoal, advertising steers. you into| ' x
safe harbors where honest merch. | °* Government Street
ante sell at fair prices. Read the :
advertisements every day. Make
them your shopping pilots.
SAYS AIRSHIP FLIGHT
POLITICAL SCHEME
Widow of Commander aha!
towne Testifies About Loss
of Dirigible Shenandoah
Washington, Oct. 10.—Mra. Mar-
By COL 0. F, BROTHERS, beiret Mais. talighaely, aide ol
Associate Editor of The Vancouver Star f Gtmammeter Zachary Lansdowne,
— | eave of the Shenandoah, relter-
. em ated yeste?day before the naval court
ang. ts typical ¢ the of |inqulry that the Navy—Depart- the Miners’
ment had ordered the airship on the] ’ .
Western fight for political purposes | Britain voted
over the protesta of her husband. To| ticipate In the Royal Commission
support pst statement, abe pend. from H recently appointed to Inquire into the
| into the record, showing Lansdowne} *Mtire coal Industry of the-country tf
. | -wanted—the—flight postponed to the) The men’s particiaption ts contingent
Ever @ friend of the worker, Can-/ second week in September, and also | Upon further efforts to remove -heir
}- wanted a trial flight to test the De-| grievances regarding wage reducins
trolt fiying mast in certain regions ana the refusal of
‘My husband was very much op-| the employera to: grant tnemploy-
posed to that flight, she said.. “My! ment benefits |
1c
2 IMMEDIATE
TERMS .CAN BB ARRANGED.
PF. R. BROWN & SONS LIMITED
‘L112 Broad Street Phone 1076.
UTILIZE TIMES WANT ADS
BAL
Phone 125
SWINERTON & MUSGRAVE LIMITED
Real Estute Agents 40 Fort Street
Politicians Make Best Husbands|
Says This Very Jolly Bachelor, |
Who Is Canada’s Prime Minister
LA SPIT UNpeR.
“Tas _vere
_ STONE
?
husband_also felt _ the. Shenendoab
was ¢ ship of war and should not
be taken inland,” ~~
ISH MINERS ARE
TOAD INQUIRY
Delegates Reconsider De-
cision to Stand Apart; Wage
Questions Are Involved .
Oct
decision
10, == Reconsidering
the of |
Federation Great 1
London,
their delegates
of
been that he cannot get enough time of romance,
real
and
yaa LYON MACKENZIE
King, Prime Minister of Can- Fits
tei play. The cares. of a progress of the present century
yesterday to .par- }
Minister these days are many
de-|°
} various, - lems has made historyypoth in- the
| growing country like Canada, where}
research work into
industria) prob-
ada, as ia wel) known, has . ;
voted his life to public service
ja recognized as one-of the world's! histery ia datiy_—in-the making and}
especially ‘in a. ble and
and
United States and his own country
experts in economic and industrial} where _one—faise_atep—may— eet pack
problems; fn fact, at one time od
wag director: of investigation of aia
dustrial relations, under the aus | must seo him in his country home,|
pices of Rockefeller When not en|
Foundation. of imagin-
ation, he-has lofty ideala, and. can-| follow him wherever he goes, he may
the’ country's ada's Prime Minister represents all
To know Mr
progress.
Mackenzie King one} that is good in modern péltticat life |
i
BRINGING UP FATHER
the famous just outside Ottawa.
Possessed grossed in official documer @, which
not be classed as a politician tm thé) be found working on his small es-
tate—his cabbageée-patch, as some-
build-
'
He
one once called it—digging
ling a wall, or laying a path
} J
j is fond of riding, and is a great love r
of animala, In other words, he vis a}
GEE: IM SO LONESOME
IN “THIS “TOWN - IM GIT THe
SICK= 1 WONDER IF THERE
1S A DOCTOR 16 THis
—__-thersiehis —omestiented —human
| being When if Ottawa pe reaties
at Laurier House, the one-time rest-|
dence of Sir Wifrid Laurier, which |
was left to. him by the late Lady
Laurier. The inside of the old home
has been refitted,
one of the most attractive residences
and to-day
in the capital
AIRS HIS VIEWS |
Ap ‘soften the case ‘with bachel-
ors, Mr. Mackenzie King prides |
himaelf ‘on his knowledge of the}
and. occasionally. alrs hist.
Not
fair nex
opinions at women's meetings
long ago, speaking at a gath
g of the sort, he declared that
very
politicians made the best husbands,
and then proceeded to give his audi-|
drice some advice on domestic affairs. |
Not being married, h¢ ts. of course, |
privileged to do so. Possibly he be-|
|
|
i
BILLY KING Heves in the old Spanish proverb.
But not that be
when the opportunity arises, he de
accepted senso of the word. “Marry and grow tame”
is very wild.
\ NEED A NEW PAIR OF SHOES
BUT THEY'LL HAVE To WAIT TL NEXT
WEEK ~— WRAT A RELIEF “TWIS (8B ‘TO
MY CONSCIENCE ~ \ WATED “YO
PAWN {tT BUT WRT COULD 1 DO?
\ WAS STARVING —
Mr.
of eminent tact
of public af
alt)
lights ta throw off the cares of office Needless to say Mackenzie
FTER A HASTY GLANCE ‘YO SEE IF THE
COAST WAS CLEAR A VEILED FIGURE
EMERGED FROM THE DOOR OF A BRAWN
BAoP — “THE BOOKANT STEP AND OOYFUL
BEARING BPEAK PLAINER ‘THAN WORDS
OF A PRECIOVS PLEDGE REDEEMED —
tivi-' King is possess¢ |
knowledge
and to take part in the social ac
ties of the-ordinary mortal a
A DESIRABLE MATCH
Mr. Mackenzie King-is 4
elor, bachelor at
sul
bern tn 1874—heé is In every way a
“desirable match.” Ever. dince he | Str Wilfred Laurier, who personified |
assumed office his one regret has French Canada, his life has been full}
HERE “OD: ARE, BAMBOO, BROK
WHERE “OU BELONG — AND HOW |
WVBR & COVLD PUT MNSELF BACK
WTO NOUR REART WHERE
) FEEY “WAT | BELONG=
OWL WAT A FOOL
sound
fairs and a fund of sympathy,
bach-| of which are good qualities from a
and a jolly that.) wotnan's point
comparatively young—-he was | Although he
lesque personality” of his old chief,
of view.
has not the pictur-
SNOW-WHITE AND ROSE-RED..v
{/- @-
ALL: THAT 18 LEFT OF IT—The wreckage from the dirigible
- @henandorh, collectéd from the piace it crashed in Ohio, was spread
out on the floor of the hangar at Lakehurst, N.J, so that. niem-
bers of the nnval coyrt investigating the tragedy could inspect: it.
It‘is- shown here with the giant form of the Los Angeles looming
hlah ov - :
STS ICANT YOU SEE THE HORRID Fir ‘1s
PULLING ME IN?” SiiRiEXIO THE DWARF. “Twas
FISHING AND ‘THE WIND TANGLED MY BEARD WITH
: THE UNE JUST AS THE F1S) '*D0K THE BAIT.”
© McClure Newspaper Syndicate Bn. :
RAN TOWARD ITAND RECOGKHZED THE.
DWARF." WHAT ARE YOu DOING? ASKED ROSE RED.
"SORELY You'RE NOT GOING TO JUMP INTO THE
WATER" -
Sie
ee mR fe ana eee
One-Hundred Dollars.
You wouldn’t object to paying that for a furnace, would
“you? “Wecan “Sell furnaces trom $100.00, ‘including
. installation, beeause Albion Furnaces are made in Victoria,
and you do not require to pay heavy railroad freight
charges on this furnace. -~
Albion Stove Works Ltd.
(bor: Pembroke § Phone Ot"
We. show thal Yor —y
wil! compliment pe
The speed with
Which our coa/
Ee co,
J.KING HAM LIMITED
1004 Broad St. Periberton Block hone
Cur Method 20secks to the ton aad 100 (bs of Coal in #3:
yi sae
' Boy of Tenis :
|
| To be Tried For
Causing Death
STUDEBAKER
Standard Six
Four-Door |
De Luxe
SEDAN
$2,435
Guysbore, - N.S.,
ippeared
Oct id
e Clyke, ten before Magis
trate Desbarres here
yesterday
charged with causing the death
his Warl
Pray mate Skinner,
ged ten, by
lyke “home, r
rief hearing the
0 stand trial
— - = White-at pias Pnitip got
Price delivered in Victoria. The shotgun and 4 snapy
greatest in Canada ouple of times, fired at Ear!
to-day er The struck
Jameson Motors Ltd)" - =
stantly
Vancouver Island Distributors
Phone 2246 740 Broughton St. (Cure For High
shooting him at
( r here After
t lad.-was committed
Wo or a
it a
Skir
car alue
charger
Ls
CURRENCY CHANGE”
The Lor
6 the Midland
Reginald MeKenna,
Chencelior of the Exchequer, is pres! -
dent, as authority for the ‘statement
that British currency notes probably |}
‘wlll be replaced some time in
by Bank of England notes of
same denomination, namely, £4
The monetary system, it
out, would then be on a
standard, 14,
gold circulate
used
Buffalo, 'N.Y., Oct. A cure has
been discovered for high Bom pres-
sure, according Dr. William J
MacDonald of St Cathar On
who is attending the con
sion of... pb pmabeigms..af
Western New York here
serum
Mu¢h work
London, Oct. 10
ton Dally
Bank, of |
former
to
which ' .
tario,
Chan
It
is a
ered has been done by
r MacDonald
extract
research |
Toronto . Genera!
remains to
ew
ape
ists
ised the
x
‘ since Dr
reed | serum, 2
The
aot. Vovem ber
lucted in the
pit Muct
|learned before the r
I placed on the
an paid
‘ s bel
ld
no
true
except that
not being
as in I
would
instead
be
es “
medicine
market, the pltys!
SPECIAL!
LADIES’ OXFORDS
Black or Tan
| DEBT MISSION
RETURNS TO FRANCE
Havre,
Minis
France, 10
Calllaux and the
\¢ f hig debt funding mission, returning
from the United States, arrived
on the steamship @rance early
| afternoon
this
Medium>»or Low Heels
Sizes..5,..546..and_6
$2.98
Reg. Price
35.00
NEY
VHEUMATITA f"
HTS prsf ac
YABETES 6
The General Warehouse ol
627 Yates Street, Victoria, B.C.
Wholesale District
Below Government—Phone 2170
GOOD NEWS FOR
STOCK RAISERS
po oonrotteast-it's\‘good-news'’-for-those-who have. not
“tried the. ‘‘Bowman’’ Abortion Remedy on their
stock. Get some. ‘‘Bowman’’ NOW—don't delay;
Always have it on hand. =
’ SS
ErickBowmanRemedy(o.
z PHONE 1351
—QFFICE AND FACTORY, 618 YATES STREET
Blood Pressure)
—Phillip }
| sign the Higgins pe
Centeal..ood| WANT M
| PERSIST
VICTORIA DAILY ‘TIME:
|___POR WATER SUPPLY ‘NOT
~ CONTROLLED BY. VICTORIA
Committee Empowered to Employ Expert Engineers
in Search for. Water Source Capable of Devélop-
_ ment: at. Reasonable. Cost...
Satisfied that Saapich is not necessarlly. tied for all time to
Victoria for supply of water, the Municipal Council last night
unanimously authorized the water committee to employ a hydrau-
lie engineer to report on sources of supply still available and the
cost of delivering an adequate flow of water to Saanich users.
MAYOR SEES NO HURRY
The Council reeeived with tamazement a letter from Mayor
Carl Pendray of Victoria: suggesting that, as Winter water con-
sumption is low in Saanith, water discussions need not be hastened:
“‘Itis-not a matter to Be decided offhand,’ wrote the Mayor. :
,, after pointing out that negotia- .
tions: commenced jest Maréiy Reeve
Macnivot dubbed the city’w recent-at+
titude “procrastination” and “stall-
ifg-off."” Councillor Hagan_advised
“an ultimatum,” demanding a -definite
statement from the City Council
“The City is just passing the buck
They do not intend any. settlement
with Us Ufitit the Lagisiature has
concluded,” he said, being supported }
by Councillor Stubbs
HASTE DEPRECATED
}finicipal solicitor wilt bé asked for
8n opinion as-to linbility,
DICKIE AT TILLICUM
HAIN PLEADS FOR
Seas ee) ~ MOMENTS
tanding,
opportunity to
Frank T thint
I tariff cc
ms
inte Canada
Road hoot last
rkie, (ec rvative
the ‘
of. the evr
mmisaior
duties™ or
were urged
night t
ASK PROTECTION
Grat
candidate
Counci am
Wants-+9 souk ius fo
they can get.” Cour
urged application to
for prot , Reeve Ma ! rint b
ing ty water
powers w
white
lor tices -¢
1 peraus.
plained that this polity would-keep
all the money in Canada, make
verybody prosperous, keep people
try, build up manufac
ndustries
MLP.P..
LDickle
jot of t
the
out ek iw
sranted fifty ars
metry
an twenty yeare
& municipalt
powers
AZO,
organiaeds
Had we bebr
as ect §
Drtter — beevesne
urged
be on
verred
CONVERSATIONS
Count
PREFERRED
dtew
the City
wat prot
eve
sr Stubby witt
Hing upon
finite
Maen
ipeteueted
dray and detall
tude of the
This acti
Rifkhanys
follow
view—Mes
determi
Saant
REGIMENTAL ACTIVITIES
No
By
quer
an ulti
ymmendd
17—Battalion Orders
Captain J. Wise, Commanding
Ist Battalion, (16th Bn. C.E.F.),
The Canadian Scottish
Victoria, B.C., October 8, 1925,
Part
vhead wit
wil
Drill
The Battalion
gth at the
October at 8
regimentat noking
oting prizes or the
be-presented on thts
Serv ice
strer
ueeday
hold a
SI
Councillor Kirkham then déclar on T
supply
able for development
1 the
that water
the coun
authority to ir
pert re
Dress
ports
QNEY BACK
d
end
Ir
bode thas
Off will
pection Armr
The
casry
Arm
Dissatix w
al Inspecti
nt and Ch
ommencing or
1 the overcharge
ENCE DENIED
at the meters sh
Check Ww
Wat
tq admit
ft long
Reeve
have the ‘
debated means of ottalining re BC neing
Counciior-Kirkham remark
amicat
appears
readir fa
ner Preston 1
m te ha
» conducted t
vale Inatruc
Hall, Bay
sndiay, October
nted. out e of
polr ! r
when ¢
Sis
Dr
on
PS Se re ee :
ire f Instruction will be of
and the nights of
on by the
ommencement of
M
us ttend e_ will
H
laughing
Ceuncilior Hagan
we obtain this refu
It back from later ac unts?"
Resve Macricol con d his
jon to a sententious “Might.”
REFUSE OVERCHARGE
The Council refused to pay the
quimait . W aterworke , Cor
asked for seryi« of Cf
of Seattle in an intensive
the Saanich .waterworks 45
methods 6f connecting up with
Eaquimalt mains at the Gorge
Sacnich has
isked
« nt aniidates At
ut? Car }
s
their names to
Room_ 111
Street or
jarton
remberton
Major
Street
Sergt
study
stem
m February
Ww
Captain and
already ‘paid Col | ist Battalion, (16th
Thomson $59, that being the limit Canadian Scotts
in the original arrangement for his|
services. The Esquimalt Ce mpany cy we
intimated legal proceedings bar a Two Initiated Into
| §t. John’s A.Y.P.A.
MERSTON
Adjutant,
Bo. CEP),
h Regiment
The
Regiment,| +
ithe pool
The St. John’s Church Anglican
} Young Peoples’ Association had #
very interesting session on Thursday
when Miss Morley and Mr. Calder-
| wood were iniliateé a3 new menibers.
A. P. Chadwick officiated: at
| Rev. F. /
a \-tnia ceremony, using: the, occasion
to give a short address on the aims
. | and objects of the organizations. A
| sovial followed ;
On Sunday, October’T8, at $ a.m.
va a organization in conjunction with
| the Beacon Girls’ Club and Cortn-
i thian Boys’ Club of St. John's Church
f ‘are to attend.a corporate communion
‘New Move in ae
| Fight Against
~ ~ Cattle Disease
Metvilie, Sask, Oct. 10.—Hon, W.
R. Motherwell, Minister of Agricul-
tture, intimated here that a con-
ference of the provincial govern-
ments, and_of the. municipalities was
to be. called to devise a more nefive
programme. for the eradication of
bovine tuberoulosis,__The conference
Weulnr vein furtherance of the steps
taken by the Denariment or Agra:
ture in the establishment of tuber-
culosis-free areas for cattle,
’ e
CHASE
—. ¥
~ Blankets:
Laundered
Pofrost Your
ing. to
‘methods of arriving,
“the
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1
Fa Lh
tig :
ier atu aah
. re 2
r &
Did Wheat Pool Pavy/TAIFFBOOST TURNED
Lower Prices ThanDOM BY PRESIDEN
What Non-members Got? s
Win-ipes
# mana
The statemen
the Winnipeg
La report coy
Price-Waterhousr
which can
by” those
In the
ted
har
Co
Pavey a aoe ss Sen
compante
\. twent
whe
s grail
its Tower
b the
in store
1 true a t
termined they «are
to consider the prices paid by them
to the farnve street wheat pur
chased < The farmer the
privilege of holding his s»
wWiheds indefinitely and can receive
a relatively price than the
h
verage
unless willing
on
ul binned
lrigher
erage if
be hold
et
early av
enough to
m
heat On a
wheat the
‘ aiffere Phe
cally
dispose of
no ernative bul
his. load when brought 1
the-elevator-at-prices fixed trom day}
by ome
all the elevator
to day
t
association for
hrat
jeally companies
We -presume
prices as given
& Company, or
lo not take
ig charges
ch These charges
int to five or ten cent
depending on the geriod
was kept in store at ti
Particular. note -ahould
the fact Phat the final
namely, $1.66 a
ortherh, basis store J
included all charges beth
and terminal elevator The
deductions from three to four
cents a bushel from our final pay
ment for,reserve purposes have been
credited to individual farmer
in the books. of * the provincial
pools
“In questioning Price-Waterhquse's
at the average
prices: fer the_non-} farmer, we
would take as an example the price
given on No. 4 Kota wheat,
to-day’s published statement makes
special. reférence to, stating on
kyota wheat—the —maximun._was
reached, the pool paying $1.22 on this
and the non-pool farmer receiving
ation stor-
18
be t
payment
bushel
No. 12
William
in. country ~
pach
three
$2,600 °8Veswonld. “reter_the_-erain}
exchange (to- their daily © closing
prices which Olearly sliow that No. 4
Kota at no titme sold at the price-of
No- 4 Spring wheat and yet Price-
Waterhouse gives the average price
ot No, 4 Kota secured by the fifteeen
elevator‘ companies at $1.60 or lic
na bushel over Ne. 4-8 prbag- wheat
Surely this would indicates that the
method of arriying at the average
price secured by the non-pool far
mer ia ridiculous. otherwise
average “price of *? i Northern
should ft: Téast be $1.77 a bushel in-!
rlead of $1.66.
average
elevator companies®
Kota as Deing $1.60 #
surety the grein exchange would nol
want the non-pool firmer te think
that the average price of. No
price wr
sales of No
dn
LWHAT EXCHANGE
farmer |
ed wheat!
which |
the}
We do not question] province of Ontario in varied quan-
the fifteert) tities
4)
ishel “Watt atated tiey could not recall any oe- | Were eXPSCUNE To Torn thet Ronee
\ 4) able records show the earliest to have
Kota was $160 a bushel when one October 19
All-Her- Glory—
EET ONE panpaflles
F you er
from head-
aches, backaches
Or any other
symptom of Kid-~
ney_trouble,.take..
Gin Pills. They
will’ cleanse the
Kidneys and pro-
mote sound
health.
&
GIN PILLS|
50's:
LOVELY, IN The SPRING YOURE
WONDERFUL, iN THE SUMMER
You'R! GorGEous, Bul w The
AuTunn = Dh BOY!
You're TaE
BaP Seautieue OF Alle
Present Yourse't With &
we Walle
orth
SUIT
A Sult of Clothes with ineers .
Personality, Distinctiveness,
fart al al
A.select- range of tnie season's
woolens to choose from.
Tullor to Men an4d*Women
G.-H, REDMAN
~Ateads 8:09
'D. MacFadyeén
SATURNA ISLAND
HE SELLS
“Our Own Brand”
BUTTER
| Free to Asthma and
Hay Fever Sufferers
Free Trial of a Method That Anyone
Can Use Without Discomfort
er Loss of Time.
We have ar
1
net
thma we
hod for the control of
want you to try it at
No whether
ave ¢ r 1 or
present
Coolidge Refuses to Raise) srr voiher it) i present
| Price on Cotton Gloves by [you stould, send. for a tree ee
Duty Increase | climat ‘ve, no
A
our-exper atler our
recent de
as
matter what your
-upation,.if you ape troubled
won or Hay Fever, our method
relieve. you promptly
. . e especially want to and t to
Despite Protection of 63-t0-75--rme-sresrentis topeters cxann, wera
Per Cent, U.S. Factories |: :
Forced to Close
reter exchange —tinity
prices f the entire seusor
Which ' the
his grade to bo ssound $1.35
iar
vained
ws average
rations, fumes, “patent amok
ave failed We want to
ne at our expense that our
1 is designed t nd all difficult
all wheesing, and all thoue
at
9 tefor als offer t
f the mid- | single day Write now
in | begin method at ‘on
‘ money Simply mail couper
OV le to-day—you even do not pay postage.
nterests :
demonatrated
Washing
departing o
dle west,
re Oct
an invasion ¢
where sentiment
excessive
© Important to
usually
protection
facturing
ralnst
Eastern
Pre “oolidge his
rthern
FREE TRIAL COUPON
FRONTIER ASTHMA _ CO.,
27D, Nis a “and Tudéon
Buffalo, N.¥
Send free trial‘of your method to:
at pL fabric
VOR, 3 ecommendatior
handiifie| nit
nmiesion.
wean] SOR
1924
ywer
twithstanding
a
the face
the
industry
of German competit
tection
mission
toability
mestic to survive
wit!
iicated
“istt| Fokker Moves to U.S.
ive''| To Open Big Plant
livir
R MORE
explanation
duty probabl
of _ moderate priced
om $1-to-$t-5t- ape
vusly t President is
i a procilamat utting the d
bob-white quail fror
ta \Ach On the recommendation
tartff commissior
advice of game
ryland and other at
to import the
it greater
by tariff
President cl
ould Increase at
WOULD COST CONSUM
He gave
[the increased
boost the price
otton glover
Simultan
Sas-}
of
as hie that
50 centsto
f the which. acted
wardens
itex, who
birds
he the
M
texired
Me
surely the qu
the farmer—hims
ied that
products
company,.the
t 1, ‘Ia being
of $10,000,090,
Aircraft
Fokker has a
which
al PNhia
from)
he
more cal observers saw in the
than
was
twe
ordinary }
particu-]
reduction | °
quail, put!
has beer
behalf ‘
been
he poo no
ever the
beb-white
indystry
mm hose
lights to
pireversy
otntyoon
glove
in
have
FIGURES SHOW
The
the y-ereet- «factory in
pacity of 1,006
ging from light
hie Ihree-engined
flights
MISERABLE AND
ALWAYS IN PAIN
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Com a Dependa-
ble Help to Mothers
Port Greville, N. 8.—‘‘I took your
medicine for a terrible-pain.in my side
is and’ headaches. |
ement —_
shouting
ewar
|who claime pool m
sae reeetyed higher
graio that
price
. The industry gained if8 first foot
DUNn-pou mem
thotd®in thts eountry after the
break of the Buropean war and
reached large proportions by
had |
‘he Yottrwing .comparati the
iined the Grain Ex
in
Deduction
Pool Retained
Price 4
Final Pool
Payment
to Grower
Certified
Ave. Paym't
to Growers
$1,668
43
1.584
1,493
|
|
Norther
Northern
Northern
Northern
Northern
rthern tough
rthern tough
rugh
tough .
}2 Northern smutty
4 smettty
13 Northern damp
4. damp
| 5 damp ' :
1 Nérthern Ffejected
| 3 Northern rejected
(4 rejected ‘
5 rejected
4 teugh refec
4 Kota
Durum
Derum
herum
Durum tough.
Durum tough
ted -\,
sc eh a nh hi te ta th tt tp tt
2
+
4
time German industties renewed
their -activitiés in foreign markets.
Congress increased the duty on
ll =
; j| cotton gloves
| - - | Cuber tariff act of 1922 after muck
| | discussion, but even utider present
| high rates ranging. from 4% to 76
I" y per cent. domestic factories have
’ shut down or have been cogverted
| 4 \ to other uses.
Winier heritded| President Cobdlidge is known to}.
yesterday when | have turned a ceaf-ear to all sug+
throughout the) festions from eastern manufacturing
interests looking to an“ upward re-
‘The ofall wasthe eartiest..on | vision —of the —tarift-in—the coming
ax weather experts to-day | session of congrese The Demoeratay
Get. 16
approach
generally
Toronta
an early
snow fell
record
casion on wileh- there had been auch
tlie _Coolidge ~ Biiniitii¢tration as. a
Tanow flurries on ctobOer 9. <Avatl-
high tariff regime, but the
wants no tariff issue in the congres~
gional elections of 1926
need ancl ie
VICTORI A, B: 0. a SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1 10, 1925
How t
ee
Battlefield
Thirty-three Men in Spite of Series Injaries Make the Red
Cross Workshop Here the Brightest Shop in Town as
They Cheerfally Establish Themselves as Usefal
Citizens. “Tell the People What We Make and
They Will-All be Biying Here” Is the Spirit of
These Happy ex-Soldier Workers
HIRTY. THREE Victoria men, some with hands off, some
with legs off and all with some berious defect, are taking their
place in the labor market, not as successfully as their more able
competitors, but taking their place-all the same and enjoying life
because they are able to do so.
When these man came back from the
war shattered and torn, it was a problem. what to do with them To
absorb them in the ordinary labor market was impossible and a man with
nothing to do is liable to cultivate an unhealthy state of mind.
That 3s
‘why the Red Cross Workshop was established, and whether these veterans
are-in an unhealthy state of mind now-can- be judged by @ visit to- the
JAE he Eaten, ke She oi nt TE
place where the thirty-three former
soldi¢tsturn-their—hands_to pro-
ductive work and turn out hun-
dreds of different articles in wood
and wicker work.
The refrain of ‘Moonlight and
Roses," whistled by— one -work-
his “staff, face
Keep above. water:
At the Red Cross’ Workshop,
however, a one-armed man cheer-
fully “‘carries on: He was the
gifted whistler who Went so. mer-
rily about his work. AC one-legged
competition “and
e Disabled Me
en “Carry On”
ounds Fail To Keep Veterans Down
merable articles which find their
way into stores of Victoria or di-
rectly into the homes. of people of
Victoria.
Right here tt-may be stated that
the Red Cross Workshop: does not
make money. The men behind-t
exert every effort to make jt self-
+ supporting “but with “everyman
rated in the labor market at some-
where around half-the~ value’ of
_ other men it is an-ithpossible task:
Fhe Red Cross Workshop, how-
ever, is becoming well known.
There‘is a demand for Red Cross
Workshop goods. The former
fighting men are turning out’ work
that is good and they are lowering
the total on the debit side of the
ledger. Eventually they hope to
operate to show a, profit on the
year
QUESTION ANSWERED
The work they do is made the
more_jnteresting because they are
allowed to use their inventive fa-
culties. There is no time to brood
on disabilities. Most men who
were seriously wounded of for that
matter men who have met with seri-
| “PRODUCTS OF RED CROSS WORKSHOP |
men, the haunting
“Mother: Machree”-from_a_ singer
and “My Wild Irish Rose”
another rival ¢horister, are indi-
cations that the Red Cross Work-
shop is a success in its main ob-
jective and that is to - provide
happy. healthy employment for
war-shattered veterans who would
not otherwise find themselves oc-
cupied. In the ordinary labor
market -a one-armed carpenter
could-nbt-expect-to—find-work-no
matter what his capabilities. A
contractor whatever. his
ations, cannot afford fo: put
one-legged or one-armed men on
melody of
from
inclin-
songster was busy on a_ kitchen
cabinet, Another was busy: with
a huge stack of pencil boxes be-
fore him and the pile grew with a
rapidity that shows theée willing
ex-soldiers
job.
s
$10,000 PLANT
The hum of machinery, for it is
a $10,000 plant, mingled with the
singing and whistling of the work-
men who every day, instead of be-
moaning their fate at finding them-
s¢tlves unwanted commercially, as
they otherwise might do, are daily
doing their bit turning out innu-
are no loafers on the
ous accidents in civilian life will
say -that-one of the first questions
they asked themselves even before
they were taken from the scene of
the accident was, “Is this going
to make me useless for the rest of
my - life.” Fhese » Red
workers may have had doubts on
that score then. They have none
Cross
now .
“Look at this,”
Okell,.M.C
shop and a disabled veteran him-
self, remarked,
Uistic lamp
Major S. H
. the manager of the
pomting to an ar-
“This is a
specimen. of the work we do here.
stand
EXHIBIT OF RETURNED SOLDIERS’ WORK |
| MANAGES worKsHoP| |
MAJOR 8. H, OKELL
his dinmg-room suite im black
walnut was made throughout here
to order. These wardrobes, china
« | sets, radio cabinets, medicine
chests ‘are mostly made to order
They are
the shop.
finished throughout at
Chey wall stand against
any product ~
APPRECIATE
“Do the stores” o7
SUPPORT
tuills” Took
upon us as competitors? No
They are among our best sup-
porters David Spencer's Depart
for instance,
}
ment Store, gives us
a_ standing order which helps.us
considerably. — We make all thei
kitchen tables sold in the store, be-
sides filling special
»ieces of furniture. The Hudson's
Bay Store and Smith ahd Cham-
orders for
pion also give us orders which help
considerably in keeping the staff
busy
There
when the ‘orders come in slowly
are times, however,
from other sources and we are
carrying all we stock.
Then we are forced to lay a man
off or put the workers on shorter
time and that is what we hate to
do. We like to keep them busy
One 6r
worked here have
can im
who
since gone to
other shops asa reselt of the ex-
perience they gained here,-and in
spite of the disabihty, mak-
mng-good..
LOTS OF VARIETY
The well-stocked storeroom and
the variety of articles in stock are
a tribute, both to the workman-
ship and the creative ability of the
management and staff “ We
couldn't do it uhless we had co-
operation,” said Major Okell.
“If a man has an idea he makes it
known. When he thinks of some
article that he believes will prove
-a seller he reports it and then makes
one, - If it looks promising we go
ahead with it. “If people knew
what we were making and what we
are prepared to make, the orders
would come in better.” Major
Okell. ‘enumerated a few articles
among them the following
Tables of all déscription, book-
cases, china cabinets, .wardrobes,
medicine chests, filing“ cabinets,
trays,..pencil boxes, step. ladders,
ironing boards, baking boards,
medal — cases, ~ screens, — clothes
dryers, shoe shine boxes, wooden
toys, beehives and parts, rabbit
hutches, dog kennels, book rests,
pedestals, stools, kitchen cabinets,
built-in features, office and store
“alterations and fittings. -window
and .door’ screens, window boxes,
garden seats, garden ‘swings, ¢tc.,
clothes. racks, rolling pins, ‘plant
baskets, pipe racks.
A BIG LIST
steadily two men
are
Even that big list does not eover
all the activities of the. Red Cross
Workshop. All hardwoods, ma-
hogany, oak, black walnut, satin
walnut: birch: aShotlywood:
maple, ete. are carried ready. 16
fill any order that may come in or
to’ make something for
Theve are. cabinet making and
stock>
- for Powell's hardware store
genefal woodworking, - furniture
repairing and renovating, picture
framing,- painting and palishing,
upholstering, basket making, chair
re-caning, grass and wicker chair
repairing; —wire—working and tin
smithing departments,
-Anyone placing «an “order ¢withe> :
the Red Cross Workshop can rely
upon a good job done with proper
tools and by men who take a pride
in turning out work that will win
approval and. more orders for the
veterans’ store.
“ANYTHING IN WOOD"
The thachinery «s the disposal
ef these plucky workers. whose
motto well might be, ‘You can't
keep a good man down,” consists
of a 15-h.p. motor, band saw,
combination cross and rip saw, with
titing table and boring attachment, *
cut-off saw, pony planer,.drum
and disc sander, lathe and jig
saw. A $1,000 stock-of picture
moldings and a large stock of
matts or mounts ‘is carried for the
picture framing department
* ‘Anything in Wood,”
what we claim to do,”
the manager. |
“that's
commented
Any work will be
plans and specifications
boys have never fallen
down on a job yet? Some time
ago We did all the interior fittings
We
send-men-any-time-to-do light car-
pentering work in homes.”
ANY JOBS?
The major rattled off a few
other. of the multifarious jobs the
Red Cross Workshop is ready
to perform In the paint shop,
painting, polishing and renovating
of -all description Upholstering
in-all-its--branches;-both repairing
and new work, Making wire
lamp shades, galvanized iron con-
tainers..._._In_the... basket shan,
flower baskets all designs and
sizes, béautiful wicker fern stands,
wicker trays, soiled linen baskets,
souvenir pin trays, shopping bas-
kets, work, baskets, layette baskets,
thermos wood baskets,
wicker doll cradles, cribs and. bug-
gies, waste paper baskets, wicker
vases, pot covers, etc Repairs
to baskets and any- wicker work.
In this department is also done the
re-caning of chairs, the old-
fashioned rush seating and the ‘re-
pairing of wicker and_grass.chairs.
done to
and the
carriers,
These thirty-three men who
comprise the staff according to the
preconceived notions, should be
described as the dark’ shadow of
the cruel aftermath, the men
upon. whom Mars has. left his
brutal mark. Their average dis-
ability is over forty per cent
war,
Every man in the shop fromthe
manager down if Suffering from
some war disability Foéuk men
are severely wounded in the head,
two have lost a leg, one has par-
tially lost a hand, one partial loss
Ffoot, two wounded «i both
arms, many others wounded in legs
and arins; others. suffering from
heart*trouble, chronic — bronchitis,
neurasthernia, rheumatism, deaf-
ness, hernia, sciatica, myalgia,
stothach trouble, general debility,
etc.
CITIZENS
A fiction writer might visit the
‘shop ‘and find material along the
lines of grizzled fighting men, and
heroes’ of many battles, bowed
down with the weight of the
wounds of battle, making toys and
pencil boxes for children, in sharp
gantrast with their-grim exploits in
France and Flanders, but that
~would..oaly.de=for-a-vimtingfictian
“writer.
A newspaper -man sees citizens
who were temporarily soldiers—
who got too badly wounded for
the ordinary labor “market. finding
their niche‘in the world again and
becoming useful, cheerful citizens
through ‘the medium of the Red
Cross workshop.
“Let the people “know what we
can_make-for them. at the chap so
that the orders ‘will pile in and the
“Shop Will be running at fall htt
with all the disabled men who
WW hen
can't work outside on the staff
and that will be fine,” was the
way one worker expressed himself.
“Never mund writing about us, the
war or how we got ‘pipped.’ We
have got a good. local . industry
here Tell: the people about it
they knew”
will give it lots of encouragement.”
In this connection it
mentioned that it is an
worth listening to It
about $2,000 a
monthly wages run around
$1,700 Monthly — materials
bought almost entirely in \ ictoria
amount to about $400.
VICTORIA SHOWED
THE WAY
Ht-ts-interesting to note that Vic-
toria showed the way to the ‘rest
of Canady in establishing shops-to
may be
industry
circulates
The
month
abourir-they
novelties, pleasing to the child's
eye, that come from the hands that
qnce gripped guns in Flanders.
Carts, wheelbarrows, scooters and
other such playthings of the
out-of-toor kiddy are all products
of this plant, where these men,
unrazingly skitifallin-their-art anc
not devoted to. one branch of
“work alone, but expert in all parts
of it, do their daily labors.
Day in and day out, these de-
termined men have set themselves,
despite their injuries, to make a
place for themselves in a world
that has changed since they left to
follow the khaki hordes _ that
poured into France from 1914-
1918 And while they’ serve
themselves, they also serve the pub-
lic, for the workshop is. turning out
as fine a grade of work as any
factory in the whole of Canada.
the
their
willing to learn,
have
ana now
become as expert as
tutors.
TFHRIVING INDUSTRY
Once the Red Work-
shop's reputation has. been spread
Cross
abroad, and the wares pf this
place have become common
properly amongst householders on
the Istand and elsewhere, the fu-
ture of the little factory is assured.
Alxeady its encourag-
ing and the. grade of work turned
out, the high standard of manu-
facture attained and continued,
cannot but have one effect upon
the interested parties The Red
Cross Workshap is bound to suc-
ceed, but its success will be more
rapid and more satisfactory if, the
people of Victoria give it the sup-
port which it deserves.
success 1
| SOME DISABLED VETERANS AT WORK
provide employment for the dis-
abled men. _The-one in this city
was established in April 1921.
Since then shops have ‘been. started
in Vancouver, Winnipeg. Toronto,
Kingston, Hamilton, Montreal,
St. John and Halifax. At none
of these shops is a man admitted
until he has passed a board of
doctors and has been declared
unfit through his- war disabilities
to fend for himself in the ordinary -
labor. market.
With the Yuletide season draw-
fig’ Weaver; the Red Cross Work
shop-kere_is devoting more energy
and time to the manufacture of
“Toys and articles suitable for gifts.
Many> and. varied are the dite
HARD TO LEARN
For some of. the men, who had
had little or nothing to do with
os ae dateslale " ei nolan now to Sash to. a growing
turned from France, the activity
in the Red Cross Workshop was
* something difficult in the extreme.
But practice and constant ‘en-
deavor has given them an-expert-
ness which many a man, older in
experience, lacks. | They. are all
men of ability now, no maiter how
awkward they may have been in
the beginning and the material they
turn. out Bears
testimony as to
their proweéss.
~ In the beginning, there were a
few experts and a few others
The workmen who chisel and
plane, hammer and join from day
to day, month in and out, are
varied trade.’ They are ‘conf
dent, and:they want the confidence
of the Public.
Major $_H. Okell, M-C.,_is
manager of the Victoria shop. J.
Cashmore, general foreman’ -
and J. G. Morely, foreman of the
basket shop. The workshop com-
mittee which works so hard for its
ANSE. consists of F.°W. Jones,
airman; Mrs. Harold Heming, —
i hg Victoria Red Cross
3 Wea. Morkhill: Esq.
. Tawnen, “Esq., and Rt.
Rev. Bishop-Schoficidy
c bd = tein
Pe Sipe eee econ Ss tetera ane ot
“PAGE TWO-TIMES MAGAZINE SECTION
Sproat. Great Ce
Lakes and Lakers; Geology and: Seenery; An Island
Dweller; Stamp Falls; The Island Backbone
and
a #en
STAMP FALLS ON STAMP RIVER NEAR GREAT CENTRAL LAKE
stem 1
[ror —
tue belts; “The water history Aa.l_polnted out last
ths. anouniging.of _\t
been glaciat to h
and fi thousand
counts for comparatively Li)
broken. lines of the m«¢
it Sproafi Lake
ns Kil
mo
week /riginal inhabitants
a landing
béginning mo aout
the ro
on its
isin prabiaoleere sab rea |
pares ‘ the’
and have | made
MS aac pegeen
for a
among
narrow ,shallow:| h
feet. berries
.
and
perk
then
edge whe
| depths, and
gliding +
| sides In
ipants him
bear
boat
and
subatitute
1 elving
the
for
Man's
f
intain—y
Even twplated
dome
ndul
t
threw
discovered
scarce gr
timenta
tion 3
the
forest
some food
one a
taa are
ptt
time
there
ike a like berries
capable «
er a boat came near
from the
a point of rocks
He was not
more
plentiful
nothing
He and and
at near
make
owner
wing
was
whene\
the b
patch and or
waited his daily ration
| disappointed More and
ame and food Was
abundant; there
in
sen
jleap of
lrings of si
| still surface
|A
jat
poi oo ¢ , : r on
many Mount Art ¥ . # Into ‘\ i nd
jin the f
}and water
ings h
| boat
cable with ting
must
t
explotta
the same Ss
embered that has been
of
islet ar “issued
memorani 1 large amount erosion
high |
but
remains
as the deep
steep gullies testify
n
acars
boats
Coast and
lakes
which ne
times
ened by
ds
olay, 4
"land gra Through these the ou
ltlowing rivers are- cutting Ww
} tt The
of Sproa ake is only 160 feet
Centr
are waa
but
One day a
enough for him to ine
ff with an ollskin chat
sprang ashore and tried
it, but the bear téok-it to his ps
wardrobe in heart of the
and ne ppeared Another
an oar nearly captured by
» progressive and acquisitive ani-
othe pear grew to be Ws great
of Sproat the Ark of
Great Central, Then one day he was
labsent when & bout Came; and-never
again was he seen, Whether he fell
bunter’s rifle swam away
obedient the call of
self-reliant life,
the bear the
subtle
to do
th w
€ c the intervals aro
und
. al walt by came
improvised canvas
ar
The
| f
jthese dark lar mas
ores
we
to recover
lake abo
a ivate
wamith
the crim
bre
peaks
shadows in the | goa
the lower slopes were LThe
purple ha whith fn a
appeared the near .
V1 reflected In tr
was the r
linoet startlingly .a silver ling
of, lighti cut dark reflection on
the distant water as in the-landacape
old aquarelist
GREAT. CENTRAL LAKE
The capable hands of my
| directedthe-ear through the woods
from Spr to Great Central Lake
The fores « of the open kind with
little undergrowth Ferns abound, |
isu wise it's | Ttchinson’s New Novel
“One Increasing Purpose”’
jfor the deer » common along
—
their the
its
the
wil. an surf.
at
al
whieh—they lie
Alberni! Canal
and at the
time ver re
w swept
ned
“ was
deepe level of Great
es
is y
red
in
the
to it
rock vaheyr
of
ibutary
ina
r extensions }a@ feat as
r nt
rather t
was ‘=
land 4
face, previous to the glaciation, these
| upled by ri
greatest the su?
closer.
er | valleys would be oct ers | 1
emptying into in the vic las he came
ity of Barkley § Alberni jthe old. and more
ir typical fiord “drowned js not known But
tiey that tf a valley whose .bettom | isiand Hyves in th
lhas been sunk below the level of | existence, the: fireside story, whence
the sea, in ‘part at least. The ker-|he may yet pass into’ the immortal
sk may be deen along the rail-| company of myths.
or
‘ the ‘
the sea in
a
or
Canal
the of pa
‘“ vel of
t form
the hostess
along
twe at
on
the road enters the woqgds of the|/Cceasionally one of the old bulldings aes
Jowland at the foot’of Sproat Lake./ia seen, Three decades have paseed,
Everywhere there axtraordi-|gince thelr occupation, and the. “im-
nary abundance maple 'and dog-| provements” buried in the
wood as well as alder, so that the/growth of young forest, save for the
usual somewhat Monetonouws green of | fenve-corner_ or the roofless walla on
the coniferous forest is broken by| which you stumble in astonishment
the green, yellow and pink of Séj- | Now the eaw-mill is one of the chief
tember tints. The home of my host lactivities of the district. A new one
and hostess 4* on the’ shore ofjis in process of erection at Sproat
the northeast arm, the house And/Lake, and, Great Central Lake is ap-
buildings delightfully situated on the] prosched by way « yne. At the end
hillside and commanding fine|of thé road where we run the car
view.—of the lake Dominating the}under an open garage roof the lat-
seene ia the seddielife mass of Dog|ter bréaks with curious suddenness
Mountain in the wiiddle distance, |on the view. Immediately below us
ver whose right rises the “Conical is the renoWhed Ath. A long one-
peak of Mount Klitea, To the south story building of pioneer architec-
ia the range of Mount Anderson, 3,000] tural features lying a few yarda from
feet, -with Arbutus Bummit, 1,700| the shore From it the ¢ye. travels
feet. in front, Down the hilisides|ajiong a narrow waterway to which
run steep gulliew that carry the Win-|on each side’ the-mountaina make
ter floods..and in whose stony beds!sydden and abrupt descent. The}
no tree can maintain its grip. On| water-filled defile looks away to thé
the summits grows that member Of| snowy peaks about Della Lake, the
the heath family familiarly known |headwaters of Drinkwater Creek,. the
as “heather” or “heath;" unpappily | principal stream ‘entering fhe west-
1 bave never yet been high enough/ern end and bearing the name of
to find ft, and know of it but by} the Ark’s builder. The aspect’ of
hearsay. Closer at hand there are| Great Central is more vivid than that
small wooded peninsulas —whose|6f Sproat, more dramatic im its com-
#hores, like those of thie lake, Bene-| position. hut the latter ta the prefer-
yally are either of dark grey rock} able, I should gay, from a domestic
OF, Where the rock diseppears ander point —Tre Stamp” River rong our or
the covering of “drift,” or narrow | the eastern end whith SHAME Witney
gramey finite where among Ahe sedges |away tumblea in a storm-wr white
the swamp gentian lifts on sturdy |foam over a series of terraces in the
ts an
{way cutting near where the Sproat
‘ Lake road crossés the new line, &
{vate grey quarts diorite of character-
: istic “granite" appearance. This
: rock ‘Invaded the overlying andesite
—|duripg_a period of earth-folding and
dark—andeette—The-river_bearé the -now._forms. sip Morita and allied |
name ‘of Captain Stamp who after| granite rocks the backbone of Van-
his settlement in Britigh Columbia | couver Island, as of the Coast Range
|was @ pioneer in the shipment oe en the mainland. Over these bard
\chtp spars fromthe coast. The man-|resye He in the neighborhood of the
PE f : 7 lager of the firm which succeedéd| lakes the loose and incoherent ma-
By ROBERT CONNELL his, Gilbert Malcolm Sproat, is hon-|terials of glacial origin, most of
7 S : = ored in the name of the sister lake.| which were deposited in the sea
One of De Quincey’s essays (I know not which, for it is.many|'raytor Arm” and River (Sproat| when the land under the weight of
years since my reading of it) tellwof a certain confusion which | Lake) commemorate Charles eae loo was pome Sees lowes ine
i ts , : eo Se who took up. the first lend in the/at present, of which connection w
arose in the early years of last eontinry between-the Lake School a nee oxeraet: ad ne Lecce neat ths Binding6f marine coustle
of poets, as the little. group of writers who made their home by the THE GEOLOGY. OF THE LAKES |!" the clay is imdubitabte proof.
shores of Grasmere and Rydal Water was contempruously Called terest in. scenery is int. |A BEAR’STORY tao coee
and ‘‘lakers,’’ a North-country provincialism meaning ‘“players,’’|mensely enhanced by a knowledge| Sproat Lake ‘contains ‘several_lit-
those who amuse themselves, from laken, to play. In our days, | of its causes, and as.was pinted out the islands ha: of which, it ms be
? st » x ; rial ~ . by Ruskin os well as the younger remembered, is the property of an
thanks to at Teast one of the Lake School, affection for lake seenery Noah Titer even the landscape art-| American millionaire. But anothtr
is very widespread, and many péople find their chief relaxation on|\;; goes his work the better for ac-| became for a time and by squatter's
and about some sheet of water amid the hills, While it is true! quaintance with land forme and their |rights the domain of one of the abo-
that much of their time may be| x
spent in fishing. boating, walkigr, |
ete., yet the underlying motif is the
recognition of that peculiar charm |
of inland waters which Wordsworth |
4id..201pUch to commend to our no- |
tice. It is not therefore to be won- |
dered at that fram Langford: and}
Glen Lakes north the lakes of the |
Island constitute guch a charm for.)
_ the holiday-maker. The restfulness
expressed by the calm sky-reflecting |
mirror, the absence of -tidal aberra-
tions, the silence of night—unbroken
except bythe soft lapping among
the reeds or the cry of water-birds, |
seem to many a tired city resident
more conducive to the vacation spirit
than the activity unceasing of the
pea, though there sre some of us,
however, to whom the -crash of
breakers. and the leaping of the
waves are as good news from a far
country or cool waters to parched
lips,
ALBERNI A LAKE CENTRE
Running over the pages of the
Scomass Hotel register one is im-
pressed with the diversity. of gee-
graphical quarters from which the
pienatories came to find here a eom-}
mon centre of Interest and amuse-
ment, There are of course the
names of those whose aims are busi-
ness ‘rather than leisure, and there
—~nre—groups—otsignatures..which tell
of -shipwrecked-crews. who have
found at the Canal head a haven of
refuge. . But even the- pressure of
competition or the reaction after a
great disaster can hardly stand out
against the seductive force of tow-
ering Arrowsmith and the verdure
ot the Somass Valley. On the west)
side of the Alberni Canal and east
of the Beaufort Range there are four
targe takes —-arranged— in a_tfairly
parallel series: Great Central,
Sproat, Nahmint and Anderson To
these Effingham Inlet might almost
have been added but its seaward ex
tremity has no barrier and no out- |
going river, and it is thus a sea-
loch. ‘To the first two the Albernix
are the threshold; Great Central, the
- more distant, is but twelve
miles from Port Ajbern!, ‘Sproat
six miles The Canal itnelf
a is like Effingham inlet,
loch, but of greater size, thirty miles
long to* Barcltey Sound and from a |
mile to a mile and a half wide, and
when the Sound ts reached the trav-
eler finds himself in the presence
stan arctipeiag= of -islonde,. Jarse
and small, green with forest or mere
stacks of waye-swept fock Down
the Canal’s course-are the herring
fisheries, the pilchard ofl-plants, the
salmon canneries and deserted
whalery. On the south side of the
Sound the Pacific emerges
from its underseas realm, on the
north side is Uclue where. Mr
Fraser prosecutes his experiments
in plant hybridisation and inciden
tally has “put on the map” for
of-us this little West district
‘The Albernis are the natyral centre
for all this, but: especially for
wonderful lake country
SPROAT LAKE
On the map Sproat Lake looks like
‘the picture of an Amoeba in a bt
ology with its irregular radiating
-arme. This only goes to show, how
ever, that maps are as misieading
as_statistics, and that the only way
to ‘get the good of one to know
your place first. Imagine, if you can
the attempt to visualise Britain from |
the atias, with {is bulging east and
. shattered west, or Italy with its “leg”
itline As hopeless is it to picture;
at Lake from the best of maps
three short arms lié nearest
point approach, the fourth
extends twelve milee“from-thelr eon
fluence Leaving two Albernis
the road runs the Somass
River for about miles when it
croseés the stream and enters the
fine-forest of ‘Tashaheh- Reserve. In
a pleasant little vs on the left
where grazing cattic, sloping fields
and omfortable buildings, contrast
with the wild surrou ings, lies Mc-/ every roadside the west coast
Coy tiny pool compari-| Here and peeped. out from the
eon with {te great neighbors. Soon) shrubs the remains of old log-fences,
tt new extension the rallway|of farms which once marked the wid
to Great Central Lake is passed and) with the impress of axe and plow
Greater Than ‘‘If Winter Comes’’ in Theme, in Charac-
terization and in Humanity—Famous Novelist’s
Sincere Religious Message to the World Through
Lovable Hero, Simon Paris:
ot are
— —_-——_-——_
By PROF. W. T. ALLISON
The eternal quest. This is the theme of A, S. M.-Hutchinson's
new 448-page novel, ‘‘One Increasing Purpose’® (Thé Musson
Book Company, Toronto). As the title implies, this is a novel of
Purpose "The purpose of the~auther isto reveal the steady pro-
gress of a sincere man in his search for a spiritual meaning in life
until-at last he finds K.0-H; peace—the kingdom-of heaven in his
own heart. The pergon whose’ searching after God is described in
these pages. is Simon Paris, a character who will remind every
raader ot Mark Sabre, the hero, of ‘If. Winter Comes.’’ -Simon
éan be jolly at times, has a fine sense of humor, is very compation-
able, but he 4a a self-queationer, Just
as Mark waa. He likes nothing | ®"4 sorrows of. others, has a loving
better than to look into his own soul, | heart, and much imaginative, sym-
to test his motives, and analyze’ his | pathy that. after his mother’s death
tecreatigns/ to other: people and tothe feels sure that he can commune
events. And ike Mark Sabre, Simon | with her, does so every night, and
Paria (His two brothers, their wives | receives inspiration from her, flashes
and hie friends called him Sim) 1a| of “knowledge, mystic hints, “It was
«sentimental young man, wats | thi myptical or payehic. éift of Sim's
THEP WON Abdeed adjective in its| Which lay at the, basis ofthe re-
best sense. He has delicate sensi-|markable religious experience which
bilities, is keenly alive’to the joys! this novel reveals with such a vivid
an €
tered reund the Bummer
{describes
The}
the
of}
VICTORIA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER. 10,
1925.
“HAVE “WE GOT-THE YEAR BACKWARDS?
The First Peep of the Oyster from the Half Shell and the First Bright Flush of the
Broiled Lobster Among the Reasons Why Autumn Should Begin It
The present week may be taken as
More or, less representative of the
| #eason called Autumn. For a good
many hundred years the poets have
been busy with this season as they
have with all the others, Around
| each of them they have created a
legend. And the legends -are mostly
ulmrue and need correcting
For example, in Spring there is
suppesed to be a tremendous gayety
let loose, The young lamb is sald
to skip and play; and the young
man's fancy is supposed to turn to-
wards thoughts of tfove Anybody
| who has seen a young lamb humped
up and shivering in the April rain
for want of an overcoat knows just
how faise this lamb idea Is; and any-
body who has scen a young man of
40-day getting smoothed up for a
Winter” @Vening party “knowa~ just
When -the real seanon
comes.
THE TRUTH ABOUT SUMMER
There are hawthorns
in the lanes in the Spring; and
the Winter there rubber trees in the
restaurants with no blow#OTHe at all
But the rubber tree sees more of love
in one evening than the
does in ite whole life,
The same kind of myth has gath
have described IC as TICh,
glorious, crowned with flowers and
drowsy with the hum of the = ber
In reality, Summer is the dead time
It is the time of the sweltering heat
and the breathless nights, when
Tuactous
on the rail of the bed; when
Cuvee "ahi vered inthe -rain;-end
counted the days until the return of
{the sun. But in our own time the
| thing doesn't fit-at all,” Autumn is
the-real- beginning of ‘the year, the
new start after the dead season.
Witnéss, in {uastration, some of the
| glad signs that mark the oncoming
of the Autumn season.
The Return of the Oyster. I can
imagine no. more pleasing sight to
the true lovér of nature than the firet
i
1
|
}
of the lovers}
in. blossom |
in}
hawthorn.
The peets ;
people sieep- upside down with their ;
| feet
there ja no one in the G@ity bur thet
farmera and no one
| the people
is all disturbed, deranged
when it hot
late t6 begin anything
to start something
dies
on the
short
farms but
when life
and out of
think
and
when: intel
dumb, and
tional slumber At
& nothing of current
} toterest emeept the-eapedtiionea to Che
elty in
sorts la too
too too
early
lect orator is
na
problems
there
such
time
Norh Pole and the rescue parties sent
t to dmie away the explorers
WHAT AUTUMN DOES NOT DO
Then The
of
The rueset
moaning wind
Autumn walk
on
comes Autur
the
withers
the
nely
n poet
ts decline th
The lear
shiver in
| year
| Sood
T
talks
ay
poet on hia }
with’ the
lity of life
Now
about
shepherd the mu
and all is sadness
it curs to me all this stuff
Autumn, ae. applied here and
now, ts nonsense No doubt
DUA Th EL Lg sud with as
jate detail
HIS LIFE SAVED FOR A
PURPOSE
Even before
was
am
| my
the wir waa ov
haunted by
spared
the question
the
been
I
comrades
ed
o
when majority
killed ?”
re more, began
ner Although
religious faith,
God, always
have
him m and
to get en
had no active
| prayed to
whenever
night,
He had comm
her in years gone by
the trenches he
am Lspared?
tion; it
expecting
n his he
never
knelt
thing at
mother
inications
he
the last
with
possib!
to commune
had
his
from
night in
Mother, why
not a
the
he
One
erled,
It
ry
was
In
anawer
livered no questions
been spontaneous,
ques
oft
de
| was a sense
had
The thing had
an involuntary
his mother uttered —in
of -uncontroliabte and
exacerbated emotion.
| ut amazingly it
an
lery
to
moment
WAs answered
immediately he felt within him one
of those astonishing, unexpected, In-
expressibly comforting acquisitions
of absolute knowledge to which those
other messages from her belonged
Immediately with his cry
alone in that dark and airless dug-
he had within him the absolute
knowledge that, throuc those peril-
ous years and among those thous-
ands miore ‘gifted and more worthy
who 1 fallen and who yet would
fall, he had been spared, and would
spared he had
selected; rmerved, apart,
especial purpose. "
“That wag it.”
|} AFRAID OF RELIGION
Sim was absolutely that
this knowledge came from the other
world, This quieted him for a time,
but after he returned safe andsoynd
to England, he gave up his post in
the regular army becaure— of his
restlessness His mind was busy
with the question... “For . what
special purpose have | been spared?”
lt is while in’ this drifting phase of
hia post-bellum life, that the author
sketches Sim's ‘environment his
relationships: to.his brother Charles,
his brother Andrew, his own he-
loved, Elisabeth, and his friend
B.0.D., the popular novelist. It was
Slisabeth who gave it as her opinion
that Nis special” purpose war “of
God." To show how unchurched,
how irreligious this ex-army
was, the author makes him write to
Elisabeth, “[ wish you had’ not put
that ‘éf God’ idea into my ‘head. It
worries me. I sometimes have_an
uncanny, frightened feeling that God
is after me. I do not want that
there should be anything in pmy, life
between me and God, It is not that
I have any particular vices that I
feel I should have to give up. I
don’t. know that T have any real
vices, But I don't want to be
messed. up with religton; T don't
want that. kind etothing: 1 don’t
anderstand it-and—1 resent Kt. - 1
want to ive my own way and T den't
want to be interfered with, I foel
out,
be because ree
set for
certain
aarp na li tae foie cana SET DEI Hem A a WN"
it was,
al
long |
‘*Mother, why am 1 spared?; and |
to..her, |
officer |
“Back in our edats again as two
themselves through the air.”
t
oyster
) peeping
How
dainty
out of ite half shell
its colorings! How
soft! seems to He upon its little
dish! All the dull dead
Summer it has been asleep in ita bed
of mud, but Nature has Burst
forth-again_and,the oyster is back
}with as
AH! THE TRUE LAMB
The Youtg Lamb. And alongside
of ‘the oyster, look who is here too!
The lamb, the real lamib; not the poor
ungainly that humped up
self in Springtime in a feeble
attempt jump, but the true lamb,
dollar portion, and
along with’ Aytumn caull-
Jerusalem artichokes, and
With what eager
regarded by the people
is
through
now
thing
the
to
valued at
a
eaten
| flowers
October asparagus
is it
eyes
all true when men lived in woods and] w ho have spent the Summer where| glasses, from sticks of wood, from
fere with me. that king
and 1 don't: want to be
No, I saw it flatly,
Elisabeth, there i# no connection that
I can conceive between me and God
none.’
CHRIST THE COMMON
DENOMINATOR
But
To quote
what El
Fr.
the
sabeth said was ‘true
s Thompson's daring
hound of Heaven”
Paris. He did his best
but impossible—it ran
and then he so en
his knowledge of
of in his heart
his features transformed
the
so altractive
ality that
Andrew influenced
Andrew's wife, Linda
wife Alice Both
were terrible trouble and
saved out of their dis
And was the message
that. brought satisfaction to Sim and
others’? It was this: “Christ
the Common Denominc tor,
mon Principle of ,ev human being
that He is which is
mmon in us all interpreta
tion is, simply, that just-.as He enee
was on earth among men so He ever
since has been and ts to-day realdent
among was visible to them:
He ta ag visible to-day Every smile,
jevery | kind every kind
thought, seén or felt fi those -apoit
us, with whom
whom we only pass
simply, thé Christ who
appearing in them.
phrase
after
to
him down,
{raptured by
the
| that
So
was
Simon
avold it
was
new
Christ
were
presence
strong
face
pérson
was new
his 1
his
was
Nght -his
w of
hard-headed
power
brother
him, and
Charles's
women
and
tn®s »
fn
Sim them
tress what
to is
ery
element
The
the
| ox
men
action,
those we live, those
and see, is
is in them
‘Let me explain “this as immedi-
lately I put it to the proof and ex-
plained it to myself. Realising it
1 arose from the bank where, over-
whelmed, I sat down to recéive it,
and I went quickly along to where
I should see people; and in the faee
of every single one | saw, In greater
or in lews degree, the touch, the pres-
ence of Christ; and I knew that it
Waa What there Is of Christ in me
that thus was récognising” and re-
sponding to the Christ in these, my
fellow creatures.
“Christ the Common Denominator:
It means that the more there is of
love the more there is of affinity of
spirit (which is the spirit of Christ
common to us all) between two
‘persons, the greater,—by thet unity,
beeomen that eplrit of Cheist which
\in in them both, It means that the
liove (the affinity of spirit which
we call love) between brother and
sister, between husband and wife,
betweeh parent and child, between
lever and_lover, between friend. and
friend; isthe » by conjunc-
tion, of Christ. who dwells in each of
us,”
SIM BECOMES A STREET
PREACHER
In the last chapter of the story we
see Sim carrying this message as
mn out-door preacher: Ag the-
of Wend, “who accept it. eagerly
and wear in token_of théir new faith
alittle violet- ribbon---tt is al-
together. too much for us to believe
it-}
the Com- |
tthere is no ‘fresh meat-and. no vege- |} cowbella-«from.. anything. they have...
| tables. For the true aspect of the} handy. Here are again the ‘two
bounty of Nature, sive me évery time | wonderful trapeze performers 9
the sight of a butcher shop in Au-| hurl themselves through’ the air. So
lin th with the pink lobsters nestling| far we have never seen them brea
w
in the white celery, pure as snow. their necks. But,
When the poet wanted an inspira-j| season is beginning
tion he went and talked with a shep- Here is the Magician with his
herd. Id rather talk with a chef, ecards, and the Strong Man with his
“And the flowers! Ah, there now ig|@umb-bells, and the Trained Tiog
something worth seeing. Loox at} that actually sits on a stool. Thy
these Autumn chrysanthemums right |®T¢ 4! Gack with us again for the
| opening of another happy season
The only trouble is to find tix
gO to see them... So many-_things
starting up into life ail at
| this giad moment-of the. year
only vaudeville’ is” héginnine
Football has opened up. again
we are crowded into. the
or rather, the stadiora n
| thousands,-- covered = with
eolors’ and chrysanthem the
| bright Autumn sunshine, with splen-
did seats only’ a qulfter of mile
from the game. *
NEW LIFE ON THE WING
Football having started me
course, that the colleges
opening and when. that
can feel our intellectual
tbeen dormant in the dead
Summer, comeback again
threb. Soon we shall bi
| to popular lectures on
[namies—and Intellectual Hydraulics
| --the kind of thing that britigs }
Ting right to the peopl
tit there.
And
| clubs
are
of course, a. new
once 14
Not
but
Here
star
ims, in
a
life that ha
heat
with a
going again
Sota
c Lb
aT th.
leave 3"
not only thé lege
culture and’ brotherhor
all beginning
There are the —men‘s—lunche
|epeaking clubs right down
Japa the Ladies’ Fortalsht
Morning Musical, all
All through the
never heard single
in
co The
d clubs
new
wondertful—trapese. performers burl. -
start
| once.
Jout of the hothouse, and the giadio
|luses, or the gladiolaluia—if that
| the right plural. Even the beautiful
| big: blue yiolets will soon be with us, /
at five dollars a bunch
| And no wonder we need the flowers
\for-with Autumn the glad season of| dead leaves have been swept up and
| happiness ts beginning again Wit- fT burnt. The trees no tonger spoti-the
nese as the principal sign of it | view The motoring ts fine. If the
| The Re-opening of the Vaudeville | poet on his Autumn walk, sunk in
|} Season. All through the dull dead| reverie, gets in the way, let him look
| Summer we -havenot_seon_a_single,.out—or-we'll_sink him to where.he'll
“act,” We were away from town, or; never come bac k
| it was too hot, or the theatres In our Autuma, crowned with
| vicinity were closed of celery and lobsters,
again!
| BACK IN OUR-SEATS AGAIN
(Copyright, 1925, by Metropolitan
But now we are all back in our
seats again watching The Seven Neswpaper Service, New York)
NEXT WEEK:
Sistera—<an they really be sisters
“The Gasoline Goodbye”
have
Now
talk on Mexican Folk Music
Two Weeks in Mongolla,
| Years in Sing Sing
The new life is on the move. The
is one week we hear
ita
is
wreath
with us
pounding out music from wine
in. -this easy victory over the Red- 1}
wh a), 2 Med} }
sking and Palefaces (Sim's, name for
the old land And to church-goers |
wvho haVe been familiar all their lives
| with this teaching of the presence of
Christ in the human heart, the rell-
gious revelation of the Great Purpose
will have little or no freshness of
appeal, Frankly I do not think that
the materialistic reader would get
further than the chapter which re-
lates Sim's psychic communion with
| his mother. “But if a non-religious
reader could survive that part of the
narrative and could jyendure the
}lation- of Sim's Pauline vision
jon, I feel sure that the story
| prove to. be singularly
Mr Hutchinson is
churehy; is the antipodes of the
he has visualized the dis
of the joy of religious truth
| by = man of the world who had never
taken the slightest interest in spirit-
}ual things. And Sim is as
at the close as the ,béginning of
Shore, Field and
Woodland
NATURE NOTES
BY ROBERT CONNELL
A STRANGE SITUATION
A few days ago a friend and 1 were
making our way around ‘th ig
promontory when
re-
later
would |
impressive }
anything but
e volca
of Albert Head
we d
were mutu attract vy
the
jBlent of a tall and yigorous plant
} springing
| surface
he 1
apparently from the bare
the rock at a distance of
| but a few feet_from the reach of the
| highest and where the spray
| of must break when a
} strong wind comes up the Straits, On
|reaching it we found that it was our
| the story; he has not become 4 familiar tomato ofthe garden and
plaster saint There has been 4/that it bore not
wonderful change in him but Jit flowers
| hot dehumanized him or made him | each
|.mealy-mouthed, It is in this pres-
entation of religious experience |
through a manly character that Mr>|
} Hutchinson his greatest
j triumph
THREE LOVE AFFAIRS IN
THE STORY
Although-have enlarged upon the
rétigious side of this story, I hasten
to add that it is somethigg more than
that. It is first of all a gallery of
remarkably vital charactérs. The
three brothers, Sim, Andrew and
Charles Paris, are very well-drawn,
So is B.C.D, the popular novelist,
whose comical efforts to-elude the
public are probably transcripts of
Mr, Hutchinson's own frantic alarms
and escapes, Then there are thp
women in the story, all throbbing
with Hfe, and so different—Alice,
Linda and Blisabeth—welove alt
three of them—poor Alice torn by an
{ilteit passion for a friend of her.
hua! and’ s; versatilé, . fascinating
Linda, who dips down to the gates
of death because’ of love; and the
quiet, sympathetic Elisabeth, who
through a sense of duty declares that
love is not for her. As usual in
tracing emotionad arises, Mr.
Hutchinson's method is paycholog- |
jeal._He-ie at his beat in -plinibing
the souls of his characters. Perhaps
he does a little. too much of this for
the average reader, who is impatient
for him to gét along With the busi-
neag of the story, ‘but, after all, this
man of genius is stronger in bis
sympathetic understanding of -t
human heart than he is in plot butid-
ing. Rich in pathos, abundant in
humor, vivacious in style, and
marked throughoyt its whale length
by a sterling sincerity, this great
novel impreases me as being a more
powerful narrative than "If or:
Gomep.” Wholly; aside from its reli-
gious teaching, 1 fall
| cleric ‘
covery
tides
the waves
lovable
at
only
its summit
nearly two
several yellow
but two frnita
inches in diamet
ituated below and as yet green. J
I have said the plant was a vigor-
ous one, the leaves deep green and
the stems erect and without any
jsign of flaccidity: the fruit was per."
|}fect and the plant was still bloom-
ing. The characteristic odor of the
tomato was somewhat stronger than
usual,a fact in itself certifying to
the virility of the plant It was
rooted in a crack in the rock’whose
only filling was the fragments of
stone broken from the sides of the
crevice or carried there by the force
of storms. There appeared to be a
Complete absence within sight of
anything that might legitimately be
called soil:- The roots :were white
and strongly compressed or flattened
by the. pleces of stone between which
they had had to force their way,
The plant was about sixteen inches
in height. Spryng doubtless from @
seed epilied from a ‘discarded and <
oversripe tomato; part of some-
camper’s supplies, it had grown .iip
in this apparently inhospitable spot,
Exposed to the hot sun and the ad-«
ditional heat from the radiation of
the rock surface, conditions which -
had long since dried up the hardier
native plants, ¢ven the Grindelia
having stopped . blooming, autumn
‘Tower Ga it aS Ma WHI
requires: no ttle care in the ordinary
garden, had flourished exceedingly
under such circumstances, In the
crevice of the lava it had been able,
re send down ita roots to-sources
of moisture. proceeding from the ad~ ;
jacent sea, it may be, with some on
Anfrequent
hs
has at
scores
served portion of the
showers; for the white roots were
moist and fresh. I do not know what
the experience of gardeners is with
overhead irrigation in relation to to~
matoes.- but this. ipolated and cure
sty “witviated plant would seem to
sugKest by Ite Vigor that it ts the
to see how | moisture from below that. counts,
nyone could Secome acquainted]; paye certainly noticed ‘that , top-
wits {ts leading: character’ and not in the
Se mine Ba sy wonering in ahem *
Nea aa
‘
VICTORTA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925 _. . —— ___AMES- MAGAZINE SECTION—PAGE ‘THREE
MEXICO STRUGGLING TO THROW OFF SHACKLES OF FEUDALISM:
2 ba e 2 s. . . . . a = . - . . . »- et Se VTE Bees Hos
Young Men With Idealism: Ruling Country To- day; Big Estates Being Bought
and-Land Distributed-Among Peons; Government.Not “Red”, But Farmer-Labor
(By Max Stern) P Bhs canse, or refusal to submit a dispute
. to an “arbitration board.” erhment will own fifty-one per cent
Now Conducting Investion of Conditions in Mexico Employers complain that the ar- ard the rest will be subscribed ta
> bitration board invariably rules + Pore shards ef banks desiring the benefit
; : ‘ ; . i j ayy against them and that many hard- of the rediscount. It will be some-
Special Dispatch to The Victoria Times
ships have been endured because of
. * . . a . . . . “s s . * * s . *
100,900,000 pesos of which the gov.
what similar to the American federal
: the government's pro-labor bias. rs ¢ bibs reserve system,
ty Try sy 4: e Shee: Y < ote To remedy petty injustices against : OE. To tntrodué® currency to ths
EXICO. CITY, Oct. 10.—The b , cs 4 ; * Se
ais The t uilding of a mode ‘oi nation & RAN oly bk capital the governmentehas organized eS n ae Mexican masses will be another task
on the foundation of those simple human rights of life,| oe ; 7G 3 4
; : : a “Technical CommissiG § to. iIngyilre | : to which_only.an..intrepid govern
liberty: and the pursuit-of happiness—-this is- the meaning Into labor disputes. One of the first ‘ Z F : ment would try, for to a population
of the recent turbulent events in ‘‘The New World’s a oH cases before the commission was that # ‘ $0 many times. fooled by -worthless
Treland,”’ the republic of Mexico. ‘ ot striking” “carmen against the 5 . - issues, paper is poison
After-fifteen-years of civil war; -after*thirty years” of “Diaz . hese : Cease abana oe naanE eT 7 ; = be The. fedleral..budget this year. te
‘‘neace’’; after 400 years of ldoting. slavery. pes = me - ie : tem ; two mMillton’ dollars Jess than the es-
I 3 years of léoting, slavery, pestilence and flood, . ; The company, claimed to be losing j timated income.
the Mexican peopleto-day are raising théeir heads for the first time |
ye 5,000 pesos a month, but the com- : » 3 General Calles has provided for the
to demand the right ef self-determination and. recognition from | ‘mission found that (the ‘company Ah _ rT payment of six million dollars due
the world as free citizens, owned the hydro-electric system and ' 7 y federal employees in’ back pay, He
Té back-up these demands a vigorous housevleanine=is-on _ Psat ou i Pots was gelling itself “juice at unheard ; ; . | bas paid_to-merchants for revolution
. : ~ * ‘ , 3 ¢ y eae Pelee: - of prices : ; | debta nearly six million dollars more,
The new programme of President Plutarco Elias Calles’s gov- : * . ssi Paces
. , : ; The conimission supported the! — ab fs and « million borrowed -by De ia
ernment meats more-than simple reconstruction. This . Sy m
govern strikers by permitting-® flood of} % ; Huerta from New York bankers,
ment proposes to fulfill as nearly as possible the letter of the busses and jitneys to enter the field] t a ; How much in earnest the present
1917 Queretaro constitution, a document saered to Mexico’s mil : eo eee. ys and the corhpany lost
lions of peons, and one writing into Mexican law the social achieve ;
| government is'can be shown by its
ee THE OIL PROBLEM economies, for in some _ instances
ments of ‘the more ‘liberal states of the United States. such as me : : ; = SR ae : "% theese have hit hardest at the very
, ° Article 27 hits Uncle Sam's pocket
. :
- Wisconsin and California. nerve In- two spots. It says te-the
7 Peon : . 4 d Ky f ture,
ENEMIES POWERFUL | ~—s my 43 big. foreign land owners that they ‘ All of which worries the little
f eerie a meres: 5 t
The government” may” “fait tiket HIGH SPOTS IN MEXICAN : ° oy may tilt Mexican soi! and extract : 4 Jack Horner of American capital
Madero's, but it is not likely that . ‘gt, wealth therefrom, but that they must jet ¢
who has been feasting on the juicy
it wil betray the people as did CONSTITUTION ' ’ ; cade share their estate with native Mext- plums of Mexico: He can etit!-eat,
Huerta and his white guards or Car ——— - > ; ean citizens instead—of_using.them.- = ‘ - =
but hell have to be content with
foundations of Callies’ political struc-
ranza and his army carpet-baggers. | = eae ees) ¥ . as beasts of burden fewer pluma
But it is a task as staggering as Free speect fr ress ree pdt gyte sf j ern Most of the oll men are balking at
any in: the world to-day. assemblage. fre : 1d cor Lo , sane the new production tax.of thirty
es ; ? pulsory state edu ton 4 cents. a barrel and aré ‘refusing to a - : tilled by peons for twenty-five cents
on ia cag aod verre Control by Me s1) natural |} ; y E e sirkk wells on “Federal Zone” lands . ; a day have made milHonatres {n_ the
at home and inthe United States Wealth conceded to foreigners : at the government's royalty terms of f
?Mine, ofl and farm jands bought
at around” ten” Cente” an acre and
\ States. From now on ghese financial
but its enemies\are crafty and power :
ights “provided the will not in
' -/ : ;
; ; } forty cents. royalty for tthe govern missionaries will have té put up with
ful. It must steer a course betweeri } nt : : J
+#-voke the protection of their go ee a ‘ ordinarily safe and sane profits.
menacing crags |
|
ernments in matters relating to {|} The people ef Mexice now are calling President Calles “the Latin: Lincoln” That the tax is not impoverishing
The fighting Yaquyis of Sonora, the these properties no foreias
GETS OIL ROYALTY AT. LAST
” Mexico has contributed one billion
A because of his efforts to emancipate the thousands of peons in his country. them is indicated at least by Frank
“reds of Vera Cruz and Tampico, the
Owned land near co r front- Y. McLaughlin, head of the Sufi OT!
direct-actionist agrafians of Morelos fers repartition « he - grea Py isteach future. it ani at | American In : =e Company of Mexico, whd paid pro- barrels of oll to the workt, and the
—and_the unabsorbed Mayan clviliea-}—tardet—estates; —no-—-monspolies, || 1 me being, at least, here is| the right.of. protest | duction taxes and royalties amount- other} day received her first royalty,
tion of Yucatan—these must be con- price-fixing .or exemption from permeated WI tent} 4 rrite-3¢-gtres-the-hMtextont eH ve to more than a half -smillion
| of a half million dollars. pahe. is now
taxation m, i ) ‘ : trage. and that t th =e dollars in a y
producing 11,000,000-barrela a month,
ciilated as well aa foreign gold-
same right en) 1 m
seekers ; Right of the x ‘ , : ction come’ soon, soctal ohh | He says his wells and products 1¢ finished product of which brings
] nt ) ’ be f« lgn ernments « ng
The army, always predatory and}] eny Incgnvenlent’- foreigners y il writt on’ this st were enjoined, boycotted and sa » United States $11 to Mexico's $1,
He r
the next few} aged from Tampico to New York and
it ts said that Caties’ recent economy + Universal suffrage; eight-hour : ‘ every effort made to break him. He's
slashes in the personnel of generals|| day and seven for
venal, is another source of danger.}} without appeat = - : Mexico leads the world In silven
ie-eecond fn lead, and , fourth ig
Here are four leaders of the young men’s government which Ts ruling copper And” Rol" That “is” why “the
Mexico to-day. All are members of President Calles’s cabinet. Min- government ts
t Ha job an ists that any
night work rhment' cannot be atili on the 4 and -ingl ’
. *%
has made him less popular with the no labor In dangerous and ur - Investor cancImake moneyon Mexico's
placing safeguards
army than with the civilian popula
healthful occupations or night proposition ister of Commerce and Labor Morones (upper left), knownas the Samuel around its natural_resourcea.
: " I and kept there by -
tion. for persons under
}
| P -Gomoers of.Mexico, is thirty-four; Minister of -Fimance . Pani. (upper oad chy taxes (and..wexailes one,
} : the strong arms.oftabor or farm and bcs BREAKING UP ESTATES
hike
“How wisely Calles and his young contract Jabor for right) is thirty-nine; Minister of Agriculture Leon (lower left) is thirty- being imposed to help fil] the treas<
. : ta eee hms factor is frank! farmer -labor “ ES — :
statesmen have steered this treacher- under twelve full salary and = aa . The Mexicans are beating theit three, and Minister of Education Puig-Casauranc (lower right) is ury now being replenished by draa-
‘ ment ‘ x words into jowshares and ‘thelr
ous course is known to the body of month's rest for women r r ‘ s r i P
political complext
forty-one tic *eonomy measures,
t on ears inte yrunin hooks, but in
Mexicans and the Mexican press, if after child - birth minimum ‘ sp ito TF © i
“The foreigners Mving in Mexica
said to be l ] e more “pink” oir t they have ru nto the most] fore the | revolution -€ € Thus at Amerk ‘ .
not to Washington diplomatic circles. || age mnifiertion -of three : ) doing 1 y baye run into the - < must not claim only the right to get
ems owned | . e farnilies right the ancient wrongs
the exception of the jingoes who tract, discharge without cause « x lem
fit; in return for the benefits they
recelve they should be — willing ta
tually beer le, t a yoverr BIG CUTS IN EXPENSES contribute to the progress and evo<
ment d«
"edge y 917 const! 0 y millions
would like to see« the. Stars and refusal to submit to arbitration } . sevuiiunin: “eine s | Piedged by the'1 constitution te 1
: . ss asinine c _ ac the 000 ¢
Stripes carried across the border and|] sickness. ! a t dent ar bye» ration e. Cuaietns deliver back to the 12,000,00 lis-
tuthk of eretaro, \ ‘ ’ 10 8 eX ons land -enough to
down to the Isthmus, wishes Calles unemplo ent ingurar atiniiky' tn the cintiorin at-thel possessed peor .
well | SP hpi ge Pac ea mettrsiap j ele feed their families, four governments
e -
‘ Follette Progressives in the last a , E ant Sacks
They know it is Calles: or chaos $ | those of Carranza, de la Huerta
' { : onal camptign “in the United . 5 : Obregon and Calles—have nder-
and that in the face of big odds he or Diaz ar re resale ws eat ; . :
ts doing his best. farming . : : | taken something never before con-
5 sing his best. = T Mexican Congress is domin- f » 1 in th te hemisphere on
In spite of .endl reports that a Here as in his teaching r . , P , 4 e Coived: in the, western D
ini: . ale Dy an igzgreasive armer-iabdo : .
- - big scale
- » » utio . » »| an ardent champion o ® Mexican } a
counter revolution lurks on every t roup, thot 1-some of ite leaders are 3
Although no payments
lution. ef the country," saya Luis N,
lowing in the footsteps of President Morones, Minister of Industry, Com<
An order the iss . Coolidge merce and Labor
volidge
50,000,000 pesos in bond bee Ite attempt to levy a tax on the
In a grim and spectacular fashion,
President Calles of Mexico is fol-
land
signed by the president. ; wealthy of its-own-soil-will be re<
Calles is forcing the government of -
taken for ejidos will be M : sistod by foreign investors. From in«
* Mexico to economize
nid for in these bonds. bearing five : é side, resistance will come from th@
That is to break up by due pro In a land where extravagance and}
hand, Mexico is peaceful, solvent and | Peon, Whose Tot was : :
sai foes a : ceas of law the great baronial
growing stable than tt Be | One of tt tanhasct Alvares . ; - bs a
Calles, the first duly elected presi The Madéro revolution found Cr . ecintly: Sareed Van cocieainian at} : { _ | estates st sprawl] over this land
* . . ve . ’ ss . Ns 3 ty < 0 rac ca-0op 2 v
dent..of Mexico in forty years, is| merchant-mayor of Agua Priete and a : i and tg move back to )-operative
= : rine , cet ea tec ee i Alb - 3 farm-villages the native Indians
known as-"The Latin Lincoln.” he st once joined the rebel farces = —— arm Ing
Whatever else he has in common} ®e@inst. Diaz: He and his friend os Ki . } and Spanish-Indians who for years
; é5 T have been little better than slaves
with the Great Emancipator he is General Obregon, marched ar | 8 . J ha en |
est and redeemable politicians and grafters hit by the
—P = eats yetem.—_The_ price graft have been synonomous with economy tax
government for centuries an econo-
Between these two the new _gov<
pall will be t taxed value of the
land piltis peér_cent, a policy rue= my___programme amounts to &| ernment must elbow its way to sol<
< major operation. Yet for the first) yency and prosperity.
time since 1910 there is a surplus in| - + "
fully der a by many of the big
haciendadees whose tax bills In “the
the” te sury th - ber ot $
good old Diaz day were as small he fexican treasury hat ie in Robert, aged six, ardentiy desired
like Lincoln in being both ardently | T@"2as army t verthrew Nuerta creasing monthly as the result of|a sister, and was told that if he
e Lincol ) de ; y » ove 2 uert j
Horiberto, Jara | re - ; ee WIPING 1UT FEUDALISM BS SED SENS ES raeS . las t ary 1 prayed for one a baby might com
Se eee Aftér Carranza had been Killed ana| ; iar aaas Pats, oo i 2 ~ eRe economy slashes in every depart-|? ‘ “ « * ‘ ’ yt e
; Ohinenok' tad eave! a wave f.. 17 in arde ionist cor 4 as The process of wiping ott feuda canat | o he added to his nightly prayers &
PEDDLED WATER AS A BOY puhnigtge eee acgnatal Fo days travéling hi < nae aE: }ismin one stroke has raised a cry| been abie to. produce the old parch petition for a litle sister
then came Callies According to Secretary of thef
balIIWick Organizing the workers ; * 43> te \ among the big hactenda owners, ha-| ment grant of the King of Spatn,
As a boy in Guymas, Sonora, he Unlike any _ governmer nthe By : ¢
| , s and fore
peddied water through the streets.| world to-day, Mexico's is y-| POSTED THREE ARTICLES, . 4 . | _ 5
‘ } each The Association of American Own-
In cases where the peasants have
tha t iY : ALK i su bleso: of all i any °o z ; mericar tat € A history -mak programm
Even the American colony, with | month 8 for broken « eoupeenme all their many prob = ‘ vhs . rich here and derive material bene<«
‘3
: : : | Results not coming as soon as he
| Treasury Alberto Pani, the savings| wished, one night he added:
the land was taken without repara- i re «|
} 54 ede gles Be dato amount to $39,316.053.85] “If you have a baby ‘almost fine
| tion, Cis ‘frant' Doing Ccneered 9 (Mexican) or approximately twenty | ished don't wait to put in her tonsils
nee that the land was secured b) an ra or appendix, as they usually have te
| tania . million American dollars be cut out, anyhow
‘poise The government's goal.is a 51,000,- fe
He never wore shoes ,zuntil he was| ernment of young mer cles. in the new constit
: ers of Land in Mexico, claiming to y
sixteen President Calles is the oldest of] tion of Mexico stand out
He read much and became aj hia cabinet and is forty-eight These are 33, 123
as cardinal re P me scores of millions
epresent “some ’ >
ar 27, and are
of dollars invested,” is pamphieteer- To date some 2,500,000° acres have} 909 peso gold reserve which ft will She insisted hotly that, economy om
use this Fall to establish the much-| 2° ecOnomiy,.she must have a new.
: > e | . ia — » te frock, and he, with equal warmt
office, calling the programme con-!| ing. the hind belonging to the state heralded bank of issue and re@is-|Yeclined to srodite the ‘onal, My
teacher. Later he was principal and} Ministers Saenz, Leon, Pani and] as much internal questions as Ameri
, ing the States from its New, York! been restored t the peons, .includ-
school superintendent in’ Hermosive| Mordnes, the strong men of the ¢ab can proh
Japanese
|
fiseatory nd more than 500 official; unde: the terms of the old 1857 con={ ..... -
him to fall into disfavor with Dicta- Whether this-spels weal or woe it is ‘against these three that bis aw j count. “Tit never speak to you again!” she
complaints have been filed with the! stitution. This land borders the sea said, angrily.
American émbassy—complatnts with-| and frontiers and was found to be] TO ESTABLISH NEW BANK “How like a woman!” he sighed,
: “Grnes every
out doubt, justifiable from the in-| held fllegally by the land-owners. The bank is to be capitalized at ‘When everything else fails, you try
bribery!” .t
vestors’ point of view
The plants the tive nerve centre} a ee
of America-Mexican relations and if} — ‘a RS ;
A typical Mexican boy of the peon
class. President Calles was attired
| much like—this when he _ peddied
ee as a boy.
]
His. radical bent, of mind caused] inet, are all in thelr thirtics sion |
9% petenlnesatiioel
<=
: early trouble. comes between the] oe
any. “foreigner__whose presence 18/5. republics, it will probably came —_
Judged tS he inccaventent,” from the land clauses in Article }
it is believed that not more than] and the administration of the essen-
a acore have been escorted to the! tially radical land laws
border. One was a political deportee; When the Spanish conquistadores
|
}
|
Bertram: Wolfe, an American com- | landed here they found the pastoral
munist; two Were derelicts. and a] Indians tilling their flelds in little
Humber were prostitutes. wee) Communes surrounding the pueblos. |
Article 123 Is ‘union iabor's Magna| TY Viceroya by royal grant left the
Charta. It writes ipto the organic pearants in possession of their com-
law many safeguards for the workers mnunal lands. These were éalled
“funda legat'-'and later “ejidos,’’
With the further invasion—of the
such as safety appliances in the
mines;— prohibition of ~chtht tabur,
minimum wages, protection — of Spaniards and later of Diaz's foreign
looters the Mexican natives found
themselves pushed off their ancestral |
fields into villages where they were |
women, social insurance agginst
sickness, old age and unemployment
—barriers againat the historic greed
: forced to Hve in squalor and work
the masters’ fields in virtua! slavery
thet tentipittocannat eRe of foreign and Mexican employers
7. . ” The bitterest pill for American
Big families such “as the one een are ‘the rule-among. the peons-in Mextigo:— he Gates “government is inveatord (9 THe Whtdreet papnient of |. GREAT LAND MONOPOLY.
attempting to place such families on small farms instead of allowing them t to remain virtual siaves of the | three months” wages if an employe)” “Tt ts said that no sich am |
Here ip how land le being returned to the peons in Wexlee. Minister of A ae
bia land owners. y : is discharged without notice, ory opoly has existed in the world. Be-
at an open air meeting called for she purpose of distributing the tands —
4
snd yates Sip ETC RS aE
MAGAZINE. SECTION
~ SCANDAL- AGAIN
--Ex-Lord-Chaneetlor’s- Money-
grabbing (In Grub St.)-Con-
trasted With Labor Sacrifices.
Tory Papers Lead Attack,
While Premier Baldwin is
Sparring For Time
London, Eng, Oct. 10 (Canediah
Press Dispatch).—The Prime Min-
ister will of a certninty endure an-
other -fusilade of questions
as Parliament re-assemblea
ing Lord Birkenhead's
press writing.
It will be remembered that a short
time back a Conservative morning
Journal -unearthed a-Jengthy article}
under the signature of this eX-Lord]|
Chanter, aid present Secretary
Tor_Indin, the ~snta:- article being.
mothing more than a ‘puftfor an en-
terprising firm which has established
works ina suburb, of. London, pnd
the journal in which it appeared
hardly attempting to camouflage the
Tact that it Is really an Advertising
sheet pure and simple. ;
Shortly before the of
session Mr, Baldwin informed
House of Commons. that he had se-
cured. Lord Birkenhead's undertak-
ing that would desist from writ-
ing for the press as soon as he-had
completed certain for @
series of articles Mr. Baldwin, in
Here is Bri
its trial trip.
nf BOON] *
noern
activities in tower.
St.Paul’s Noisy With Workers
‘As Funds For Reconstruction
Pour In From All Over World
close last
the
London, Oct. 10 (Canadian Press):—Thanks to a heavy re
sponse from all parts of the world, which resulted-in contribu
tions continuing long after<the time had officially elapsed, the
ete funds for restoration of St..Paul’s Cathedral has now reached.ibe
ee nimcaiice Gan tk has high mark of a quarter ef a million sterling, The Times anhoun
undertaking “very readily.” It was| For weeks past a small but persistent aftermath of contributions
curfous, though that when the ques-|to- the fund forthe preservation of St. Paul’s has continued, and
the grand total of subscriptions received since the appeal
tion was raised,. the Prime Minister
;ostponed his considered reply more : : 5 aa
launched in January amounts_to_a_quarter_of_a milion pounds,
A quarter _of a. million “
once The obyious inferer
that { 1 Birkenhead did in =
twee ns ue “as the-~bean~antt+
Chapter found it their duty to
oontracts
PS.
was
ca
- is nearly
only
Mea
erations ‘7
ask
are proceeding
VIOTORIA DATL
|.
4a
ow =
ay apalinnee ithe aMlbighbtestei aces ‘ “
TIMES,
ain's newest submarine, the X-1, displacing 3,50u tons and built at a cost of $4,500,000, on
The boat carries a crew of 121 men, is 350 feet long and possesses the most powerful
armament of any underwater craft ever built. Note the massive turrets fore and aft of the conning
\No Ghosts Around, But
House Languishes as
‘Rich Widow Travels
|
| Gondor, Oct. 10 (Canadian
A-terege house in Kensington ts en-
uring a fate which ts somewhat
eminiscent of that which befel Satis
I House in Dickens's “Great
tions,”
| ‘Twelve
| Pryde
years ago this house
Park Terrace—was
ahandoned by its owner... T
this period ttre local taxes,
"4 wething Mke £200 @ year,
|been. paid through a c
} bel ‘
For
No. 1
am
have
ty bank
Mrs.. Janette
» is -bellewed to be a
atroad No
the place since
and last
place six years ago
lasted & few minutes, At-
mansion has fallen into
it is said to be neither In
Y aingerone Therefore res
to be taken at present
on
owner,
w
}w )
uta t
was aband
|
ser
it
of the
the visit
owner
et: nly
Press) }
Expecta- |
ull Trg |
When Whitechapel
Copies Old Oxford
; ‘Battoon Pants-Go
London, Oct, 10—The flapping
“Oxford bags,” those balloon type
trourers,-have gone thewas ofall
extreme fada in conservatie Eng-
land. {
«It was not’"4. much they were
bizarre in style that caused their
downfall, but the fact that White-
"chapel amt Bitlingsectes othe
antithesiw of Oxford and the’ West
End—were too ready to copy their
voluminous folds that finished
them with those ‘who first — dis-
played them. Young Oxford could
not brook such dubious popular-
ity, é
English Summer .
Good at Least. For
Golfers, Review Shows
—_
| London, Oct. 10.—The ‘British are
| sonstping about ~-the -Siamiter vit
has just gone=the first Summer, to
the mind of an alien observer, :that
} thie island folk have seen since 1922
But it was not'a_saltisfactory Sum-
mer; no Summer-ever-is in Pn¢giand:
When it rains it raina too much
and when it does not.rain it is-too
dry to sult the farmers;-Usualty it
rats too much;-which is why every-
body hastens to explain to the new-
comer the existence of a saying that
} the English Summer consists of twb
-} sunny days and a_thundersterm
atter part of May and almost
ite of June wer bright and
this. year, the brightest month
has enjoyed the
drought of Even duffers got
golf drivea of 250 yards, so long a
pron did eeefiare ground give a truly
hit ball Cricket and tennis matches.
often -stopped by showers, were
halted during the early Summer only
when-tt-wee-time for tex ~
July Bégan well, but before {t was
lover the climate got back to nor-
Teatey=2'tittte sunshine and-2- tot of
rain. During August sunshine and
warm
England ‘eince
‘Latest Book Hits Ruler so
Only Salvatior! For Spain Lies
in Change of Government,
He Says
By MILTON BRONNER
Lendon, Oct. 10.—Vicente’ Blasco |
Ibanez, who has attacked vigorously
and almost eontinuously during bis
warfare with Spanish monarchy, now
finds himself upon the defensive
| Heretofore thé Spanish govern-)
ment has contented itself with sup-
pressing his books and trying hard
to. jgnore..him...... King Alfonme Xi
has replied to him, tut only. in mild
terns, as in a speech at Cordova
where Hd sald: ‘
“We ought to pardon him. hoping |
that in thetfiqure, insiead of panning |
“novels, he wil once Wore write
mances that’ we.can all read
admire.”
But Ibanez now
moned tO appear
court at
|
|
ro
and
been sum
the. military
a charge of
revolutior
haa
before
Salamanca on
publishing a booklet of
ary ¢ acter, If he faulls.to appear
he will be declared a rebel
What the thinks of his
nationat admiftstration canbe gath
ered on almost pages of his latest
work, just 1 in French ‘and
be printed in Spanish for-the-benefit |
, of 5 America.” Its title la “Wha
|- the Spanleh-Repubtic Will Be Like
| He refers to the king as “Alfonsitc
a contemptuous diminutive, and calls
him:
“Liar with
“Cemedian
s
novelist
any
jasu to
}
a crown.”
changing his uniform
a das
squin king.”
Hard, That-Novelist Maybe...
Declared Rebel
“BRITISH ARISTOCRAT A SOCIALIST.
Lady Cynthia Mostey, attractive daughter of the late Lord Curzon,
recently startied British. aristocracy by. addressing an audience Aa
Lord
deed” offer undertaking “very
if at the beginning of the year | sible by the fur
|
the
readily” it togk him some little time
noise caused by
}for thelr commission_of experts, who}, Ie
| had taken. over three years to ¢ i
to summon up this amount of readi-
(Smith is Lord Birkenhead's| sider the. p put the ‘equi nor
them in the but
ness
~respond.: | ak > rt 7 r but!) thelr conventional
patronymic) a correspond- |! amount 0,000 or. £140,000, Tha |" -' “narra gry Mareen r3
wholly ungrateful -to
would , remote- supr
athedral in Yukon
“Alfonso,” says Weanés, “surrounds
self with generals who are round-
ond humbugs and intel
1 ls more or les# like his
ent ition: the
attention ——of
n Road
lowered,
eon house
people
The
“Comrades” and stating that Socialism afforded the only way out of
Europe's present dilemma.
Patient Scots Have To Wait As
Lawyers With Wigs and Bibs
un Up Costs and Get Money _|
rainfall. was. about Unfor
tunately August is the month for (he
conventional middle
avers
“Onn I the
tlie caption of “Chuck It on
whose
Kensingt
not
ng classes
holidays
i¢ has -chil-
weather is better
but August Is the month}
when the schools are shut So, due He
toa rather coot- and wet August,-the
Summer wh provoked a8
much complaint as ever The philo } te uM
remains of &) sophical Englishman will tell you it Spaniah republic, he thinks |
H, for the have suld include
something tc An woteled along lines of
sseeradaenhtes “fis this“ SiR mer ner } those tn Anglo-Saxon ‘countries.
} CLT IR Freedom of religion for all cults
sa never bee nm any report | mate Federated states, each having au-
the f London, Oct. 10—John Bull ts/% ® OUTRISE | tonomy borders’ but all}
meeting in t | : | | making nation |
:| Actors in London
“H ave New School:
The University |
new sort of London, 10 (Canadian Press)
in’ the One feature of social life in England}
ons of which sueh which othes strikes the xisitor fry
Granville
to t
at the
ake
and been
the
Satur
own
Thanez
| pressed with
Under
Smith,"
j | an ‘ ust o nan ra om the wine
lay Review fe- had not be nd - 1 YJ n+ | seaside,
veyed to them by wireles a d mos eal t damage
ec longer than’ a m4
original
ent of a
marked wr aps
When the jon St. Paul's Day
somely exceeded t greater of these}
It was_evident,
crowning day
en before the
fortnight when
the fund hand
ut ea peclatly
Usually
tremendously
the American reput
and lectured th
that ton
was im-
dren the
Labor vered | in
ma
Min
conalders
which they believed to be €8-/two gums.
'
tor the-madntensnce-of Hild-lthat the Youthful Smokers pits toute no ono Ls
4 isterial tradition They: bought. (or) to the appeal would certainly not be “ ”» h il Bch ‘; a Ki
‘ raste, as aid th
|the last_on which thoney would be Get Fa gs W YR en 1 7 :
* hired) tain expensive uniforms as Si ie 388
i collected, find from then until now
and trappings, for’ which the major- 3 ‘ pone Byes aw
- Home Office Worries (!~..
“try -of-them—telt-Htte—afiaction.__11 | - ntrtutions heave tlowed-in
sters
ble
to June
when he
is
Spa fs to
traveled
convinced
oratth
the abandonment
is abl
office they sac-
rift
, sential
a aaly for
be attatned only
of}
say.|}
ft in some
however
by-driv~
pone
in <response .
as a le
}
ut King Alfonso and setting up |
mn to have
drawing room. Nol} und it
ve j just as we people uch fen
m the was grouse” about
m
on
@u doing they risked: the the
of their Left Wing support
, they ugh ‘with the
* montal office and most
must have regarded
praiseworth) At
eated- party rev
ing to flout Government tradition
No net they out office
than they see a Conservative Diocese
tary of StSte confusing W jand. Ne
with t meaner’ end of Grub & lu i
and demeantr ce by pu
an important signature to the
ing.of trivial but no yubt
remunerated putt 8
Birkenhead
logy of pri
the ability
cate problems
tion is one er
should show le
bor leader fo
isterial
the hottest
Conservator
servatism
Rare First Edition |
of Tennyson Found |»: «0 secure sain verween a iste. boy's cota and one| London Brokers re
In Waste Paper Sack «0» sy:tive: ovis, eaich x-}is wnat ie worrying the xiome of-| A gain Suck Candy)
derisior
but}
cere- lo
people
action as
the a
army
pat they ve thelr aoc-
“The distance from which
latest contributions have cor
typical as any of
the globe over which
its glamor,”
One cheque hatls from
another from —-Balard,
urth fr
Christchurch,
s0 yances the cll
went thro
of
their places Bt
1 The
¥u-
another
m the
within its
with difficulties
to. J t personal
tela It T
ae BMok
Home Offi
up one great
a casts says ex
London,. October 10 (Canadian Press At a demonstration in
°
W omen in Bars He also says a republic would-# |fayor of Home Rule for Scotland Thomas Johnson, M.P., gave a
j the workers and the. texpayers. | » deseription of the experience of the citizens of Glasgow
; graphie description of the experience 0 h itz i gz
ocks Overseas |
| las Se ney te fore..a _Parliamentary..Committee
Visitors in England | ==
Jeavor te tand of neighboring districts be
mae
| ants upon farms
of es ten fo much
that ia PAs
over-here
a are of from Geel
of
thing ©
the
n the
ry
ch of
ng and af
x the
ne
woutd
Ww
New -
have better
of the English
ld
ald
land-hungry peas-|gitting at Westminster to consider-a~Bill-whiclithese Scottish
cir own, Instedd | authorities were promoting in Parliament.
virtually peons ii
"To
Enemies Thbanez have charged! at Pa
witnesses
that he attacks the king for the sake
IMO HOR Os
ft
of keeping the
ft
m 1
ndo: here came floc
d % Oct. London there cam <
e mother city «
said Mr. Jo
. law r town cler
Bure am
e
atre achool
ommittee, The law-
dito accent.the. decision
committes, and-the bill was
the House of
fore four or five
have been in
farce was to be
What a waste!
a proud and intel-
exclaimed +Mr. John-
UL
overseas unfavorably ts the readiness
with which women-—perfectly re-|
spectable women—will enter public
house bars, no matter whether they
attended by a
or not
In London and
centres, certain
cdmpartments reserved - for
only.” Im other bars It is ymin “er J ‘ » will t . :
for a notice to be displayed request-| . : MpTate “x
ing that “ladies are unaccom-| oo. nirts acid see republil alc om ; ae
panied by & gentleman will remain} te advocates, #orme om & El
no longer than is pecessary for
|purpose of obtaining refreshtne nt.”
On the other hand plenty of lic
refuse to wo
all
Apparently the only district whore | long-eervice
woman cannot obtain liquor | Lager ; the | V"" “ a an ae ae 1 any one family revealed
licensed premised is that of Middles- 7 : ” £- Miss Elizabeth Butler
|} borough, in: Yorkshire. During. the dod tn the Boxman
war y s the Hoensed Victuallers} of Portland. for more
agreed, on the suggestion of the rift i ; ‘-
Heensing magistrates, to cldse thelr ° - * :
| ars <araiaah The loc#tLicensed| firms who have ral set — ee — or
1d | Vietifallers’ Association, however, has | houses under their control ition 4 oe seh
the -diffi-} now to ‘netify the Chief eontinuc form .to the n m
that in future they are "wis
a2: dechi
that
10 W
Lords ¢
ie reply he. declisos. be4+
thier t thi king. The!
ora, he
VOrA
of
| ia we ar oks
rdith
aders the
demanded by
of Ind
Craig
rominent
of his 1
tion to show
lerived, pre
ow
inspec his tr
k
whence
vided
lar
rmittes
t : witness .
. P , | }come is U peers,
fan tras | nue common ssesal the | indications at it will be t :
> might never
jare ,
andal
gaged
male companion
building which
on desire to vielt
to be f i
n sir comm whole
newcomers
ws respect than
th
x
ae t
the r
@ seen St
its abbre
yal income is
vertain other mr.
traditions «
agloo 2 -.eepers
the
to
in
behavior mother.
radical
prevent
this.”
is
we - worshippers
may ask be made
All le
with
drives
ce Y
tures
as the
nd
who
=| 56 Years a‘Servant,
the| fecn dethroned in ‘europe, and only |wowm-—vaah on ihe Hall yas a res! Wins Championship
» agair
have men
10 Results of a
among
will have .
of vari
London, Oct
copy of “Poems
dated 1827 and
pounds,
bo
of
i A firet edtitie
by Two Brothere
valued at sixty,
et in a sack of}
paperte-a firm |
|
booksellers
again. popular |
Stock Bx~|
business is becom-
slacker
this
the
wag discoy
of
the excess
this need seems
of the 4
everyone
he
of restorati
implied
nations over
who has
that
should not!
to
ks #¢ as waste
somewhat
t{
inimum; has been
pre
| ette ere year
The two brothers are Lord Tenny- |
gon and his brother. Charles
gi appears to thought | kestion
’
resume
tobheco
the cause of
Constable
prepared to
rvice
f getting sugar trate
Mysteries of Life and Beyond Are Too G
By ‘‘ASTWCOD”’ eu
uy The suggestion wae
“ | there
Harold Sildney ‘Hodges, News|
Editor and ‘Literary Editor of The|enoush there weren't
Worcester Herald, The Worcester as =
Chronicle and The W orcester Echelon cen vale
is a brother of Harry P. Hodges, of
The Victoria Times ‘editorial staff,|
and a well-known contribulor to the
Old Country reviews under the nom
de plume of ““Astwood."
——
reat For Our Limitations
t deeps enotight to its mark, | would
ing under
nett,
¥
not
} that I
attath to articles
the
appear le
it
xcused him
<
in the
all,
to myself afterwards
significant
yave i confess
though at first I continued to. attend hav
Sunday school and chapel with the
regularity,. it
lone before I’ realised this
was Wi ‘lortsps eompulsory, and there
followed the- indulgence in - ocea- | Such things are not pérmitted now
sional absences Which worked the}
most {ll—the enforced attendance or |
the abuse of Hberty I do not feel]
competent to judge, but it must have
been about this time thatt began the}
aforementioned comparisons of pro
feasion and performance. Without
secking examples I discovered among
leading lights in the Church men of |
a harsh and uficharitable nature, men
capable of the ménnest actions; while
not infrequently the so-called un-
godly exhibited a willingness to help |
almost improvident, and a considera-
tion for others which, to my mind, disagreeably impressed by the com-
was truly Christian These &n0-| petition between rival religions
malies Aisturbed me, and T wae not! wren 1 was guites young Jt wat at
satisfied when I was told that 1 Fo Rene Gelight to mes rere ond
not condemn the: general body of) Ge the dogmas of the denomination
professing Christians because a few to which I belonged. Speaking
of them we reqnot ‘what they claimed purely from the point of view of the
to. be. The..“few" _were (00 MADY.+ vreument—1 oti think 1 wae right,
COMPETING RELIGIONS | but whille at that tima I. rejoiced
There 4s vothing new in the Sores wits execedingly great joy. because)
going. Nine out of évery ten have | reclaimed from the Church of Eng-
noted the aaine phenomena. — But | tnd a former Baptist boy 1 think:
other incidents played their part | now that there is no need at all fpr
achoolmaster [ knew, an aggressive | insistence upon that particular dqgr-
Churchman, never forgave the school | ma, for !t was merely a matter ot '
board majority which insisted that | ritual, after all, Conflict of the same I helleve I have stated two facts here, ing [Meg rtrnpnlcrers sch om acne
the chiidten, of Nonconformists need | kind, howe gtiit son, and we{and T am wondering if they count je tha eA perce Searhe os ale
not take|the religious instruction | have a multitude of déndminations | for—anything: iiheve asked, Where | which a: Bn ne to Ria SS
given at A schools gnder Khia charge. |as the result. am | new?--And the answer hes to] we are aye 7 F a he . ran
Hie -method-was-to-take thee Wile} __So-_miuch_—Sontention—over— mere ttre —tf-de- net ne terme TAA belief oo in we meen 4
heretics from their desks and make | forms seems to me worse than waste | I do not mefn the mere arneati¢—Ts | thé” Mount the pa
them stand with their faces to the | of time and energy, and yet while thas dogmatic as the most dogmatic
wall while the dogmatic teaching was }-say
Pu
but | spate when I contemplate 5
ett
' uy heither of
| materiniistic view
feel is wrong and. to say that when our .
f the | bodies dle that is the end seems ta
feel to be
gian, and I dare
them knows
assert that
in his: case names of Arnold Ben
Rebex Weat,
Phillipa Oppen-
was
After
over
P give his yas dle- an blood in my veins
phrase, being given. When {hi w
were no. ap intellectual
ap, and likely
That the reply |
the is
of
very
§ have ¢
Hugh Walpole a it's hla business.” More- | accustomed was not} covered -he was reprimanded, If, L have one profound belief it ts
that the. wholly
gifts to act as a handl Conon Doyle,
which
the R
prevail in hes of
although “acutely aware of my
I had the
that I
was ever likely
reasons for thinking
propose to give
was as uncharitable
cientious
practice | that did not convince them that he certa
n t 1
‘
heim shortcoming 5 had mn doing anything wrong .
upy
which to
question distine
of
positions
! so strangely angry at anyth
able fecline was as .
kind | dé
much
the wording tic They oc
allenge would have tobe
the | “saved”
but
connote | G9
ae he adays.
dure
now
although objectionable
is ‘not
At a
cently the
separately
\
me totally opposed even to
Every flower
to” be, |
that I
Probably I
ig ho was cone-
prece
Hterary world the
atreet
2 r altom
pus- ny G
: Worcester
boys
er. Missing
ach re
in class re
asked if they attended
Sunday sehool, There
who had to say no. I can
hile feelings. for I was
once
ever Certainty it hes | reason
that blooma,
is ‘visible testi-
immortality. Whence
sprang the theory of the hereafter?
Why has it persisted rigtt on down
through the ages? Belief in. future.
State -has little to do with the dog-
mas of any particular creed; 'for tt
is universal. Whence .sprang the
recognition of right and wrong?
Why should, that attribute have ‘been
implanted in the mind of every man
and woman? What ts conscience?
I¢ the limitations of the human
mind ure to be grasped there are
-the questions: What ds elernity.?.
When did time begin?, What was
there. before time? What will come
after? Where does ‘space end?’ And
what Is there beyond? The mystery
ts Loo much for ua. leit not worae,
than foolishness to think there is
ho Supreme” Power ordering—-things.—
picious man in
the facile -pon
tual, outpouring
little altered to indicate the attitude the ae
of that same journalist to-day
The posseeston of a brain andthe
power to use it is a. bar to the ac-
teptance of muth that -ia called
truth in the creeds and the persistent
presentation of a reat deal that
should have been discarded or re-
vised is one explanation of “the fail-
ure of the churches.” Articles, vari-
ously headed; “My Religion,” “What
I Believe,” “My Religious Evolution,”
and so on, and all from the pen—and
minds,” and hearts—of well-known
with Christianity i- | dies and
inything that compara-
term covers. While
repels many, no doubt it also
attracts others, and so I suppose my
proference for simplicity In teaching,
bin service; and oven in the bullding
must be written down as another
example of that difference of. opinion
which has led to the confusion of
tongues.
WHERE: AM | NOW?
When in Birmingham once I at-)
tended a meeting of Freethinkers. |
Tt was the’ niest repressing expert
ence in my life. No doubt the ma-
jority of those present were men and
women of “acute intelligence” But
1 surveyed that audience very care-
fully, and T aid hot see" one happy
face, It may have been that my
judgment was at fault, but I argued
from what 1 saw—and from what 1] Or to imagine there Is no pur-
heird—that atheism, whatever else | poset We - nnist believe tha™ and
it may do, does not bring comfort, ‘the bnly expression of that belief is
And in countless cases religion does. | worship. The fortn that worship
lives again
a we
rather than a 4pirl-
mony to
tively
An article from
ritual
an
rec
Wats one boy}
imagine
myselt
unknown writer, on the other hand,
especially if weil chosen,. would make
a more direct appeal from its very
lack of polish or “iiterary style.” It! to
would be looked upon as more repre-
sentative of the multitude
of “airs and graces’ it would com-
mand more confidence, In imagina-
tion that untutored column was com-
ing from my pen, but; alas and alack
this (Thureday) morning ‘The Ex-
press announced that. they had made
arrangements for precisely this ar-
ticle. The reautt te that I must un«
burden myself. here.
THE USUAL STAGES ‘
Ten or twelve years ago ~-there|
would not have been the readiness
to wtte or talk of one’s innermost
convictions—that ie in itself a) but rather with the character and
| symptom of a changéd and chang-| conduct of professed Christians.
ing attitude towards religious.ques-
thors F reeall -a~ colporteur: asking Mow .carty im...jife these. doubts
me, bluntly. “Are you saved?’ | came into existence [ cannot -say
. Amt prremenrber-how-enberranned | That 06a souos aN Lowas.ever de-
* little longer over his-enswer, it could f felt. Also} —wee—-shocked;— H+ vout_is unlikely. 1 —had—excellent
“and probably would have been & great | titude so to speak, thinking that this | seemed. to me that the man was tuk- | examples set Ime in my own family
dea) more crushing. As ft was, itlwould possess @ value of a kind that\ing a very great liberty, and when | circle, but I left home early, and,
It is more than Ilkely that many
readers 6f these notes have passed
throtigh various stages -just as I
have done, just as“these contributors |
The Daily “Express symposium
have done. When I was a child I
Storn} attended the Sunday school morning
and evening, and, when ot enough, |
chapel. twice, I was not, from cholce,
aithough there were ong or two Sun
day sehool teachers for whom T hid
a great lking - (just theré were
others L detested), and there was aj
parson, “too, who aroused in me a
. feeling of the greatest admiration,
All I heard L accepted without ques-
tion, and yet, perhaps without know-
ing it, there must have been some
mental’ reservations, some. faint
| doubts taking root, These, however,
had “very: little to do with, dogma
a_boy
-
.
Se Natdonsidated years ago a young jour-
“ nalist—young enough , at all
Sevents to put a question of the kind,
, paaked.& Baptiet minister of ‘his ac-
*quaintance if he did not think the
-possession of acute intelligence «
“nindrance to a man who wished to
*pelieve. The minister looked startled,
“but recovered quickly. “Well, may-
~ be.” he said, “but the problem has
{not reached you in that‘way yet, has
*4e7" The reply was clumsily worded,
: put it was given without pause for
* reflection; and the journalist was
* blessed with just. sufficient of, that
» “acute intelligence” to understand
| that,.bad—his acquaintance taken a
Tam using aimple language to con
vey my: thoughts, and Ido not think IT}
shail be misunderstood or considered
irreverent, if I say that, as time
went on, I became more and more
as
men and women. just now are ap
pearing in. The Daily Express. Be-
yond doubt — they are” atrracting a
great deal of attention, and possibly
their attractiveness Hes in the fact
that the writers are saying what very
great: numbers of people are think-
ing...When I had——read. the first
hres the Nog” oceurred to mie or ‘br-
fering a contribution to the series as
claim to fame, from oné-of-the mnui-
+
to our yision
*
.
~
“VIOTORTA DATLY. TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925-
in Love and Diplomacy
LONDON, Oct. 10—The diplo-} MENACING SITUATION
matic skill- of the world’s! —Diplomats-agree that-a most |
most beautiful and skilful) menacing situation again exists
queen, which already has won| jin this “‘war hatehery.’ eats
her several victories in love and} war come it is almost eertain to
’ polities, now faces ~its supreme | involve other counttles than Ru-
» test. mania and Soviet Russia,
Can the lovely Queen Marie ot|
Rumania prevent the threatened] pa, heen-to make her country
war between her country and | dominant ‘jn the Balkans by
Soviet Russie-over the possession | making each oie of her beautiful |
fs bre fertile country of daughters a quéer. In this way
the ‘‘mother-in-law of the Bal
For. centuries ..war
seems to have been the chief oc- possible to unite the tiny coun-
cupation of royalty in that tiny| tries‘and preserve peace
section of dhe: world known as
the Balkans, In this area wars
have started—over things that
seemed trivial to the rest-of the
world,
. ‘ , the now. de
Yet almost overnight these}
conflicts: have embroiled nearly |
all the Balkan states and then
spread to other parts of Europe, |
as was the case with the World
War. ;
Queen Marie’s great anibition
Ip this she has been
‘eessful,
partly
su
One daughter is now queen of
Sugostavin and another married |
sed king of Greece
ROYAL MATCH MAKING
During the last year Q
Marteapparentiy realizing that
the
| day
ee!
Besmaaliian: |
wonld_ reach
question some
a crisis, has
ane : kau. ins -beHevedl if eauld bet
shrewdly
} su
This map shows the location of Bes- |
sarabia, the rich and fertile country
which Rumania and Soviet Russiat
both desire.
ope rat on of
Visits 16 eapi-
western Europe
sought ec
Allies
of
the
tals
by the
SHORE, FIELD, WOODLAND:
(Continued fre m Ps ue Ty
bring Upwards to the surface the ti |
root fibres
A WORD ABOUT MISTLETOE
Mistletoe is indisselu
with the Christmas
and yet very few
it Mere or know
Vicinity,._.At
on Vancouy
home on the hemlock
our local pine
very strongly
mistletoe
that |
two
er Island
lewet
ne making
the other
ther resemble}
r British
although [ should say that
tie —~apemetnd pristine srttachert atte “pustness —rti—-mnrtine:
the Druldical plant may quit t Bunnin Non
fully be claimed for our own species,| his own
and that the emon aware
household Christmas may
Meted here, “the girls
neath the sacred buat
whose story ‘takes one back far be
yond Christianity and the Roman
eagles {o. the earliest known tnhabt
fants of the British the
builders. of... _ Stonehenge the
Druids and the red oaks. Cred
ited with mysterioud power
tection against heraft
fortune and it
Was the
TTSTOUS RACH TINT
tion after th
health and ¢
has therefore
that its most
visible sprir
lost.
has been
how the
body but
What abo
moved
oer les
be
ull kissed
It Ia a pl
Spizey
hat, tox
chief
ant viet
head—t?
werrmth
bis brow
effort
“Ah
what
what
s of pro=} acc
mis
three-cornered
red handker
ed his for
@ was in a atate of petuai
and had-a-habit of
when called fo
all on
leles he
about
1 aay
rdance
lent,
sa tain’t J
Pre
what aj
is
with
mark
ring
cause = rejoicin
priestiy bless
Its ¢
line
rdness
long
tomed
a age,
eccus use
its. Original
different
ted from
istrict as crowing
pine and a few
men whs sent to th
seum and described | 1
by Mr. Hardy. In company
and Mr. Layritz T had the
tune to find it Ine so
near the Sooke Riv
recent date I
cliff above
unmistakeable t
hes of small
from me.
attain a height, of
and are of « yellow
The leaves are prac
reduced as they
x not
-flower but the pistillate
{inate blossoms
, The fruit ts
{ke miniature
are capeule
58;
cance
it
On
repor
stile
w
we ats
Al
never
never
Haver
gh
n ad
local paper
been
with him
g00d-fer
me
er
had
sudden}
more
the
6
stopped
when
mnchess of
inches ants
inches
ca LICals In
visible listened
it th
are to smal}
a
pine
ale seer t
am
parate
meches.
but the
When
twuens tf
are borne
And what do
have some i
of your tmport
Oncé more the
the a round, amt on
jischarged from the ene forefinge
which—contains a slippery is % < hw deep
aa the ast is pointe a Th
bled to make He's. up
ighened surface what'll be
the line of fire. interests
prodigality | ough
m seeds | them radi wha
of setttement, The | down everything t
e point invaded }here country what it Didn't
swollen | put in his last election address, wl
thue| be was a candidate for the Coun
ifor the Castle Ward, that he
for retrerichment and reform?
he. say, when he was
Mayor—t majority -of
that he intended go the rough -
ly into the financial affairs of the
town, ond do away with a lot of éx-!
penses which in his opinion wasn't
necessary? Ob, I've heard talk!—'!
men in high. office, like me, hears a
deal... Why, Tvé heard it said that
Lea ‘heen heard to sy. if Private}
that fit wae high time to abolish me!”
Bunninge’s mouth opened: a little
He was a man of simple nature, and
the pleture of Hathelshorough with
Spisey and his livery appalted
plants
not u
berrtes
fully ripe
vi
ir
flutd, and
one end it
jadgement
which may
Of course with
of Nature there
than opportun!
stem of the pir
by the mistletoe
and an examination of tree
‘visited’ shows that the effec
quite harmful to the tree whi
comes further subject to U
of lichens, etc. ‘I think.an. examina-
tion: of | young ‘trees will show that
~—Pinus contorta-t# Much more vised
“hy this parasite than has been
theug Mistletoe ot , wholly
parasitie. a8 the —green__coloring
shows, tts drain uper ite heat te |
chiefly for water and dissolved palte
I suppose what invested ft ‘with
mystery in olden days was its growth
on -trees, ita aerial parasitism tn
other words, -Conseqently it waa} out.
thought that some great disaster | '™
“Bless me!" exclaimed
was presaged by its falling to To be sure!” said Sptiaey it's
“coring “fr contact-with the eraund-+ nayang” COMTPREnP RIO” FO apottstr
The botanical name of this specl®S |} me what, in a manner of-epeaking:
ots Arceuthobium Americanum. | has. existed’ I don’t know how long:
Since “arceuthoblum” ts’ composed | T ay 2 man—I'm~a-office? ‘goed
jreek words meaning “Juni-|cry things that was lost—at
bs big * oR le aes genus in its tonal there Crom? whoa pull the big}
evidently. fa favors that tree. bell on great oecasions, and cerry |
£
shaped
seed at 8
ning’s
with
iispere
what 1 make
ething
we at
9
ix ‘en a
dan
this
Ain't he
als
omes
,e& growth y one v«
to
-4
ia on
he
round the little ‘un wifen there was |
}-preclametions--te--be—-made?—-Whe'd+
| walle in front o° the Mayor's preces-/
= with the Mace—what was give)
tte us by King Henry the Seventh
{his very self? Abolish me?—why.
it's as bad as talking About abolfsh-
ing the RBijble!”*
“t's. the age._.for—that
thing,).cemarked Bunning.
good deal of it in the Army. Abol-
ished all sorts o' things, they’ have
there: fF hever seen fo ceed conre of
it, either. I'm all for. keeping up
A Good Estimator
“The ‘e mole eats ap thuch
‘Teacher: a
weil, Fritz,
every day as he weighs.
what is the query?" sort-_of
how... dpes. ‘L seen
much he}
Welt
teacher.
how
Lustige
tr
‘the gnole
weighs ?”—Nayela.
Berlin.
°
|
poping. yi
i hanging
} over
| crimson
44
| staring
}nelled room from the
By J. S. Fletcher
tating ated +444 —eerert sted th Lge tet tee et
in my
there
Vobody
Radicals and
ng away with su
ni
And
irs
as you say, that
mac af
ancient
but
here!
talk
t inatitu
But I
id
said
«
o
doi
but]
he said}
Lown orier
r this mace
Mayor's Day
that, now
icemar
Bunning. “Don't
However,
they
could ‘he carried
a policeman!’ Far
mace carried a pe
on
Dear, dear
fit
said
that!
if
seem to in
ring
time
which
the
room
ut end
ed the
ep- sounded behin im, |
turned
ared
as he enter
m Approac
hing
m .
His
sir?
sther My
Join him}
this
Biba led
sin. left ‘word sto
W her®a be is he
fort
This
‘ortre
B
but
No end
said
wir
inning
arrow corr
he ¢am to
gently
cked
forward
Here again she combined her) when it was granted autonomy] son
great game of love and politics,
by seeking to arrange a match
between her youngest daughter,
Princess Tleana,
most prized bachelor, Prince of
Wales,
France seemed more friendly
toward her than any other na-
tion, but. here again the queen
showed her political skill. Marie
and the world’s |
| under Turkish rule.
In 1877 over Rumanian pro-
| tests, Bismarck, the great. Ger
man .‘‘iron ¢hancellor,’’ insisted
on giying ‘the country back ‘to
Russia, thus hoping to sow dis-
cord between Ryssia and Ru-
mania; according t&. some. his
torians.
“
knew a militery. alliiee- with| REPUBLIC PROCLAIMED
France would” alienate
Great |
Then the “World “War
came
Britain: against_her, just atthe Maid the Rilasian revolution. Des-
time that country was establish-
ing relations with the Soviet.
And so her lack of complete |
ss on her. trip makes the
problem now facing her all the
more difficult to solve. “
Bessarabia has -been a poten.
tial cause of war for more than
a century
Russia acquired most of Bes
sarabia.in 1812 through a treaty
with Turkey. H--remained
| Russia's possession until
1)
1856
Begin- This-New- Mystery Story To-day
sarchia proclaimed itself inde-
| pendent unde?® the name. of the!
Moldavian republic.
| . But Rumania, anxious to ex
| tend its domains, took advati
tage of this ‘situation to
| troops into Bessarabia on. the
grounds that most of the
| there wanted annexation
that the
majority of people in Bessarabia
tare Moldavian and elosely aki
| to the Rumanians. For this rea
send
_Census figures-shew
deak in the middle
“God bie my life
Brent? he exclaimed
il, MF
hushed
and
in
ay Prevent Conflict in Balkans
people}
ruled -by
Rumania’s claim to the}
country was upheld at Ver-
sailles, despite protests of those |
in Bessarabia favoring indepen-
dence, Fhey sought a plebiscite
to determine whether the coun
try should be independent or
Russia or Rumania.
CHARGES SOVIET PLOT
Soviet Russia has steadfastly
refused to recognize the award
to Rumania. :
Riltiania charges ‘thet Bolshe-
vist agents have repeated! y trie
to stir up revolution in Bessar
whia
The recent revolt against the
Rumanians in Kishinev, the eapi
of Bessarabia, has brought)
question to a-crisis,
tal
tlic
Anda now the great question of |
peace or war-hinges-targety
the skill of Queen Marie
She can. win for herself
more notable place
an}
im his
war
ever
if she can avert
tory now
by them
answered
there
at this hour of the evening
superintendent "But!
way which
the
are two s by any-
tenes a2 he-ttp-tord~ neererte-tire bods -eouit geb-te- the Mayors pare}
Wt
dead and the
this? You f¢
living rat's
und the Mayor dead
all} for
They're
mmplic
both what y
I'll show
ru might
mall cc ated 4 them
Why—why
you ® him
mur-
. le mé this
} He led
| branched
ou and Brur
We found
anawer
way
Brent ac
fre
as ro
m
tell} dead man’s
smart, alert. | +
it's) »
THE CAMBRIC HANDKERCHIEF
Bunning knew. the w al
that ery a
passed lips In
geen many dead me
was a bullet, some
he-knew the signs
on the swift
sharp thrust of
first glance into
heen quick -t«
neros
the way in wh
lay athwart the
whith he had
forward from his chair—that meant
death. And the soldier's obser
vant eyé had seen more than that
the litter of documents which
around the still figdre were grea
stains. The caretaker's cry
shankedto.. aciculitod. apecch.
“Murder! The Mayor's been mur-
dered!" re
Brent,..a—strongiy-bullt and active
mun, pushed by, and made for the
desk, He wak going to lay a band
on his cousin's ‘shotiider, but Bun-
fing stopped him
“For God's sake Mr
touch him!" ke exclaimed
be, air, till the police— He paused
round the gloomy, oak-pan-
walls of which
of various dignitaries
looked down “Who on earth can
have done_it?" he muttered. “Its—
its net three-quarters of en-<hear
since he came up here!”
Alone?” asked Brént
“ATone; st Ana - FH take
solemn oath that nobody..was here,
Mayor as de
irprive had
he had
times it
bayonet
follows
and the
Tn hia
he had
notice Hmp hand
edge of the deak
Wallingford'’s head
mass of papers over
in falling
] s time
some
In
of
es &
what
passag one
the
the
other.
room
the
ne
collapsed
old
lay
Brent,.don't
Let. him
the portraits
THE TIME-WORN TOWN.
waittag-top hina been-in- this
before "he
was empty
myself, n ft nules
said Bunn It
urse.””
came
of ¢
Brent
admonkti
disregarded the caretakor's
om and laid a finger on the
forehead But Bunning
pointed to a dark stain, still spread
ing, on the back of the Mayor's coat
a Well wort GArMmoent oT grey tweed
Look there, sir he whispered
“He's beén run through the be
from behin right through
heart!—as he dat in his chair
der!"
Who should
manded. Brent
Bur
the
Mur
murder
him?’ de
ning 1 P>noanswer. He
were
he els
head
was
(rire
8 inteth
aking
room
ah : after
slance
at once
answered Brent
w ou? 1 want
lice-sur
Bunning
But —he's
Brer In
I: know
of the room, and
with the dead man
geoh
The
door
get
ctors
is next
peliee ll
rey
him
Mr
hurried o
Brent, left alone
ocked him uj
Cc ins
Wallingt
thel:
had not t
pa
Br
ection as Mayor of
Brent rofé
y
he and
each other
ast wae
est
bette
Mathels:
asion ‘
» spent
old towr
omething ef his plans
m of certain matters cor
with tt administration
affairs They had disc
THInES Of The aeton
and ne he a
man remembe
rtain words which-Wallingford hac
arnt #6
of
ussed
Hee or ht
Aram i“
Brent
8
are things that I can
ingford had said with
dence And then he had added
with a cynical laugh But there are
other things. that--why) it would be
literally, 48 much as my life's worth
to even try to undermi them
That was now four months
ut Brent remembered And
stood there, waiting for help which
uld be he began to wonder
if Wallingford, eager for reform
attempted anything likely
him inte personal danger.
from all that Brent knew of him, he
was -the-sert- of. man .who,
set himself to a task; would let noth-
ing-stop him in aécomplishing tt
was the sort of “man, too,
thought, who had # genios fer mak-
ing enemies. Such men.always have
Sut--murder? Cold-blooded,
erate, apparently well-planned
der!: Yet—there it was, before
The Mayor, of Hathelsborough
walked up into this room,
some
since
! as
useless
to bring
Certainly
mur
him.
had
atmosphere and furniture of his great
Sigmity, and had settled down to his
asinated by some
peeve who had taken good care to
perform his -crime.with swifiness
and thoroughness
The sound of heavy [footsteps o1
the staire outside the half-open wtoor
aroused Brent from these melancholy
speculations; he turned to see Bun-
ning coming back, wired by sever-
al men, and foremost among them,
HMawthwaite. superintendent of the
borough police, whom Brent had met
once or twice on his previous visits
_to the town Hawthwalte, a big,
bearded -man, wis obviouasl® upset,
if pot actuatly frightened; his riddy
farve-het pated ‘under the caretaker’
startling news, and he dtew his
breath sharply as he entered
, only to be am
oom |
reed Rt}
each
he}
had |
having.
He}
Brent}
delib- |
sacred-_to!
his official"uses und ®uggesttve tn its!
the
“my } Mayors parior and-ceught sicht— of
—the-sttit-tigure-tying”BtTurr tne Dig’
dered tt
Superintendent
Hawthwait bent
towards mt 6 6man
| fooked round at Banning
“Wien did he come ap
asked sharply
ut th quarters
Mr, Brent came
lng came ‘uy
down fear
the and
here?”
of an
sir
| before
Bunr
was
lor
to
Mr.
and nobody
Haturb him, but
Brent, came
up. Mr. Brent
him up, and we
as you ste
* shown
came and I brought
found his Worship
ed
Somebod
Him,” wmitte
in this room!
“Nobody here
came up, sir
“I was up here myse
body In here, and not
of the building
Hawthwaite
and Brent lo
badm,.panetiad ta
height of its wa
ail g the pe
the Maye
ying in f
walt
Trawth waite 7
five minutes before
affirmed Bunning
if. There was r
18
’ lenk
were re 8
was_a
LcTOSS
ease
them
side. He silentiys
“The door
marke
re
Ww
as I hav
Ha
nudged
ways
mem
mse
ekn
wthwaite
Rr
ut
Been rat
red
his fi
writing
TLoe
gers
his ct
he '
came hurrying
’ l g himself up
saw wh is there Hire t
stincti
Dr
Mead
They
ence.”
ely hushed
4Vel
w Gate
ve sent
releas! !
intendent
Then the
stood, efientty
the
oret
giances at
f three high
rmutec
six men
Some
present
wa tit
about room
the entral
narrow windows
Brent distinctly heard
children, playing in
nd suddenis
Hathelswyde
market
ert fleure
the
of
utside
of St
nid
nmiurm the
atree
tower
ir
end the
ring
ming
viceman who
“On the stairs
Brent: tu
eame hurr
ah
ran to
“He's « sir”
at
sir
ing inte the
ven fresh-c
straight
what he found
quickly on the
19
clean
| who
the desk
there, and
grouped
went
men
“How
found
“Pen -or
Prent
“Dead
“Yes.”
course, I
but I
jong is it .since he was
* he asked abruptty
+ twrive minutes,"
je
answer«
then”
said Brent !
font spenk
think he'd
wr
giancert
should
professior
been dead at
BAY
lat
} wily
| ienat holf
The -dactor
| interdent
| “We'ntust have him taken down to
the ra ame he... haid...... Let..20me.
of you n stay here with me, and
semi another for my, assistant and
tor Pr. farber-”
The superintendent
dera, and touching
tioned him to- follow
foom
“This is bad business, Mr. Brent!”
he said as they paused atthe head
of the stair. “That's murder, sir!
RBut—how on earth did the murderer
eet in there? Bunning tells me that
be himself was standing outside
the irgn gates at the entrance to the
Mont’ Mall from the time the Mayor
entered until you came. He asserts
that-nohode centered the” place” by
those gates.”
be § supose, there are other means
SUrecstcd Bronk...
an-ie
at the super-
z aT
gave: som
Brent's arm,
outside
ee
mo -
the
cousin, }
r| matter
ody in this part |
| be admittdd that,
t i
|!
| the
|
t
stone at
und
ped i ‘
preacntiy
or
Someone, sometime,
inthe wrong-place.
TIMES MAGAZINE .SECTION—PAGE FIVE
Queen Marie of Rumania and Premier Rykoff of Soviet. Russia—heads of
the two nations that may go to war over Bessarabia
Wild Flowers and Wild Gardens
By JOHN HUTCHISON, F.R.HS.
somewhere remarked that dirt was merely]
Weeds,
in-e@ sipter-man
defined as merely plants where they are not wanted.
In some parts of the world the geranium
finest of our lilies grow with all the vigor of the dandelion.and|
plantain iff our own British Columbia gardens.
however lovely in itself
way
TRIS TWIT HE
it is ndt wanted and is in the
beeen wT weed.
number of our wild flowers’ must
has
attrac
T'rrast
course
eauty af nd
rough
way !
be
owers
tivated
many of
the «
save
eople
‘Te more
and in
been and] al |
who } that}
beautiful
the Cane
they are
biuet
which ¢£
England
nths
same
of a
right
the
rows
and
of t
family
all the ger
eat em
mmon
campant
ai
reminds
prim
duchers
H
ee
eir
rticultu
at
f late, }
get the floral world
thumbs that they
fix on some characte
ticular plant—its sre
othness, or what rniot«-which
retions of beauty, looke
and they develop it
any extent Sometin
things that are @ cr i
nature or art, and one may
be justified holding to the opinion
that of the woods and
fields re charming: than
some ers handiwork
have
istl:
undness
can
in
iidings
are much mr
of the gard
the w
be
————$_——————_ _____..
than}
A
+,
garden put
ar
han
thi
lide:
}
| essentials
ar
m
| be
MAN’S PART IN FLOWERS
Man has, some fh
making garden flowers
good people think that flowers
made witheut the meddling of man!
must be better th anything he in
least
many
né
Pelagoni
wer
mi
fic
of something th
Seer
dubbed weeds
fa
answered
much t
ywers eré
M
fh
mse
why
DIFFICULT JOB
y it nda
re
In some
ni
fight it
wT
tt
fre
ng be wild and
+ but it won't
noth
Is, anc
éful effort
ywed to hu
ist hh
nat
at
When ar
latr
wi
| aw
terfer@’ with
As has been
ter makes a
“pointed out, man of-
very bungling “business
when he undertakes to improve upen
nature, and hé ig doing it all the
time, but nature bungles, too. Bhe ti)
constantty ¢atting from grace, ant
orossing- and -miXing In-the-most_ca~
pricious and apparently unintelligent
manner
For alj that, the general: tendency |
of the Waturai order of things seeme
to be towards Improv and the
survival of the fittest. which ia clear
ly pointed out by Shakespeare. in a
well known passage from the “Win-
ter’'s Tale”
ment,
is made better by ne man,
nature makes that man;
That art,
Which you say adds to nature,
That nature makes.
his is an
Which does “mend
rather; but
art itself ig nature
The skiil-and Intelligence uf man
are thus atnong the forces of nature
That is the correct way to look at it
And one must admit, taking ft by
and large, that man has improved the |
floral. world by his -work among
plants of: all kinds. 5,
WILD GARDENS
to
This brings” us ‘the subject
wilt partons
Nature
But
0,
oar |
Ite
is an art
|
art
nature—change it |
The
|
off
“people +
ul it anybody could get in wild gardens and why ‘are they bad
me
jot
garden
sence
every
in
ll very
Why
my
bing garde my ar
arden in
a to
not work on
régilar garden?
‘ay from the
trical
earpet
designs, so
d
a Wil
? Why
garden
the sense
npatit
fact.
wi
being
and
in
be
of
growth
Order B
gare
at
werk
the sense of m<¢
free and of. hat
he} “
} most hewltehing axpects *
THE NATURAL SETTING
and the} :
led
ire
being
on the
in her
easy style
ner;-mey
um rory. gardener should aim. at pro-
ducing a natural setting for his flow-
ere natural environment—and he
| will the nearer he can ap-
proach to perfection of a wild
garden stronger will be the in-
Lducement. te: sath intea.it
the beat and r lovely’ of the wild
m™ parts of the world,
» the choicest products of the
iituristes’ art
sid be
wher
therefore ti
jen may be
is wanted
very
ist
rat
he
ost
large
}
flow fre
Pee
uations
ere
at said that there
are sit-
rmal treatment of
and there are
question
yunds eae
ideat of
w
sma example
r treated the forme:
od, while larke- stretch
nd would be too expensive
ny w but the latter
cases art and nature must go
‘hand with any_ kind of
give lasting
a of
to
In
uld
wild
eau
suggests
wild
Englishwomen Keen
As Silk Smagglers
Women are
emugeling silk
were hefore
tariff
aris now
duty
lingerle
can
ear
be
warder
much
into
the
A gown
carries
The same
and silk
ve Nad at a
because of the
corner
wild
Let
of
natu cent
in FP
in Enetish
$50
which
kings
price Trance
ange
ana
ths
perfumes were
nel
in
the chief
women would
from France, but
leaped to the fore
A Bad Habit
are
of
an acc
ish
to smuggle
now
has
same pian
Why not
in
get su asked the
who was
the prison
doing?”
reporter
ount . of
ger
the
my
| convict
writing
bulldings ‘
“Only taking a few notes,”
reply
“Take
brought
the
nd
make
the
all
brve
should
ld garden
given
weeds,
dest
not
hot
was the
care, — sir. That's
me here.”
ver what
but in
ulbs and Roses Now--
and Get the Best
With our own big
land we
for the house. and
~euses, Showdrops
very best and our
Place your Rose o
Roses for Fall delivery.
an supply
stock and heavy inpportations direct from Hol-
you with every variety of Bulb you wish both
the garden—Hyacinths, Daffodils, Tulipy Cro-—
rnd many others. The quality of cur balbe ts the:
prices low. And, by the way,we suggeést that you
rder now, as we are already selling hundreds of
We have aenumber of Varieties that will
y
add new charm to your next yedr’s garden.
The Rockhome Garden Shop |
John Hutchison,
site Public Market
DOL BS snn
erie were the were ett Of thir
PAGE SIX—TIMES MAGAZINE SECTION
EEE Rota ey
TAKES-PATIENCE AND- TIME
BUT VICTORY JS LASTING
Every Junior Citizen of the City Should Be Fire
Marshal at Home
STWR
|
“The :dragon ‘roused itself from, a ‘bed. of live coals and shook
its head mournfully as its blazing eyes glanced down its lean and’
shrinking flanks, ‘‘l-am getting thinner; much too thin, in fact ’
it said with a sigh aceompanied by a, gust of scorching flame that
darted out of its mouth and consumed everything within reach. }
For this was-the Red Dragon,;-and its name was. Fire.
Though the dragoh thus sighed and bemoaned its fate, the]
people of the land thought it was far_too. fat).and each xear it}
seemed to demand more and more food to keep it alive. For there
were many .who were wifling ‘to do battle with the Fire: Dragon
but none.avho..cauld..overcome, ity.so. strong. fade it) grown.
Now. :to..talewthe -dragr:
for one day te fi
ty
round |
at
It
is a rrible
ovur aml greediness ate
hw before breakfast if
to stave off ite hunger untit tt could}
— DO You KNow—
hre a0
three 280% As !
1. Mice chew matches and may
start a fire without your know!l-
edge?
2. Waste paper
straw or rage are
Fet time to sit down to a meal
Wreakfast it had a why
one or two
tt
For |
with |
boring to |
iis 1mid-morning meal}
ind he
e factory
r neigt rheds
round
was
while
oft
it
and bits of
not much use
u
it
office
interiors
By thi
run and
Playfol meed
two
rhtty
farm
oft
with
uses; |
bi
exper
t ock
to anyone and are
traps
dangerous fire
‘
> duy was well be-
was feoli in a
th the
ree
and
riting ©
in a cellar?
t
rs 3. Wooden boxes or other litter
|
|
vine i hear a furnace or fireplace may
set your home on fire while you
are out?
afternoon
th
wooden
t ip in
greedily |
the dntkes |
gave}
néal
any]
rt-}} oily rag just waiting to burn?
honees tl” -s-Dirt and fires
hand?
row bit
f
into the
nd
a‘ fine
leveled the sheds is
4.-Old rags are dangerous for
somewhere inthe pile may be an
it start on the evening
t swept—ont ep
kpital
tut go hand in
rubbish
and you are saving your homes
from possible danger from within.
Keep clear of
6. Everyone should contribute
something useful to life in return
+4srsach fresh day? -Bs firs yar
shal in your home and your ef-
forts will be worth their weight
in gold.
1) eleht)
and | By
the | at he
oryttrying
flighty
and | while
and
mea
pe
work for
eh Selene, “Broomaeh: ffs
mean, of |toca .
lay 4
ia 4 Spot your nearest fire
Who do
anything burnat
nd ask the next fireman
wit it
perate when
fun,
wood or
howey
that,
in
in
VICTORTA DA
sea AAAS ATI
BEDTIME STORY
Uncle Wiggily and the
Tin House
Copyright, 1925, McClure Newspaper
Syndicate
(By Howard R. Garis)
After that wonderful shot of hia
when_ the et hall which he hit
eailed over the fence and far away
rellowed bY a creat crash Hke'd .
class —after that .l'nele V zily
stiy Moment and looked at
Mr. .Twistvtall."the pig gentleman. Ax
vel the nig had. not ninyed. croquet
What." whispered the-bunny ren-
emean An veu suppowe made
that-territie notee?*
T know.”-eranted Mr. Twis-
tvfall, “But wevhad better go see 1
knew a- rroquet balt to be. so
Never '"
tha
vken
what v
n't
Uvelver
pig
Vd bunny
the
fat
Loneears co
And
queer
ran
fo
to junir
id east
the
of
too
fence
etvtail
thonieh M
lY have done it
eorner
Jack
puppy
was
around
sieht
We
there
they saw
Pee
stood
a
and
boy
th
w
* waron which wa
empty tir the
x
cans Now
ped over and tin
the tin
te
Bushy Bear
1 hetp you
hited the fat
the he of the
p
finen, Jackie
Fein
the Viet
mad tell
him |
making a dal our
the
y
see that Jragons cannot
rreat
the
is mu
many
People
ho iike
|
}
|
}
| saw
hin
| next
| will
|
This picture was snapped at a New. York dog show. It shows wee Satah
Weymouth Taylor, aged twenty months, with her very own dog,
“Trusiy Patsy O'Dare.” ;
}one of the
enne
up
they had z
War 00
in
rather
Twistytall, d
Wiggily happened to remember
had ne lolly ir
pocket of a quickness
Twistytail and pointed
the tin can
it wae
a tight
Uncle
the
his
an
he some carrot s
when, all
grunted
wails.
“Look!” he whispered, atid they
the wall of the tih can t
being pushed in from the outsl
began to, bulge like wall of rubber
Whew!" whistled Wiegily
This means trouble, I'm afraid!
Farther and farther
the wall of the tin can Rouse was
pushed, And then—but wait = there
wip 1 room to. linish -Lthis ek here.
1 shall have to tell you, In the
one, what happened—that is, I
if the rocking chair
stand up of ite bind lege
to ride the clothes horse
Flies Hang by
Hair on Feet
- teeing that. the house fly +s prot
abiy the commonest Of insects! that
it is found in every part of thé world
SKC Tie Polar reine wna” That
it is always obtruding itself upon us,
it-Is-odd- that its-history-ts so tittle
known
We have ali
x
Uncle
at. everybody!”
Bo
and
seen a fly walking
unedRcernedly upside down -on the
eelling. Many thought the fly was
able to perform in this way because
it had suckers on ita feet, and this
idea sill holda,
As a matter of fact, a fly has upon
each —foet about 1.260-holiow ‘hairs,
try
|
ST SRE BBE RAT NOE SEE
|
Mr. |
Look |
doesn't |
;
f
|
1
TEY. TT
PAGE OF: INTEREST
THE
ISAAC GOES
AMINE came.
tines. were envious and told
than they. The well Abraham
filled with earth.
digged a well there
BIBLE IN PICTURES AND TEXT
By HELEN E. OHRENSCHALL
Isaac went into the vaffe
The herdmen of Gerar fought and said th
wells were: Esek, Sitnah and Rehoboth.
MES, SATURDAY” OCTOBER 10. 1995
BOCES SEES OSS BS IT ae aaa SE TERT
| atid a great quantity of Kea shella 2
| rier
tehell passes for current money, and
| goods are
Strange Livings
- Made From the Sea
One of the strangest trades-in th
world is the fashioning Of Sea-shells
into objects of ornament or for_use
Annually in France this trade reaches
a value of some $500,000 in the cut-
ting of cameos alone
The south sea islander makes
of the triton*as a war bugle. Many
; trfbes-in the isolated island groups of
the South Seas use the larger shettx
as a drinking vessel and water car-
In Africa a certain form of sea
bought and #old
payment in shelle
Cameo making tg a trade tn itself
le
lniported into France. every. year;
where they are taken and hand carv-
ed. The shell easily and -
pretty. tiple are: heightened: bye
delicately wrought cary ing
of all the that
cuts
creatures inhabit
| the sea shell fish are the most inter
TO GERAR.
n Isaac went to the king of the Philistines in
Gerar. God blessed him and made him great. . The Philis«
him to go,.for he was mightiér
had digged “the Philistines had
y, again dug the wells,
cy were theirs. The
Isaac went to Beersheba,
there and built an altar to God and he and-the
king of the Philistines promised to never harm one another again
Copyright,, 1922, by The McClure Newspeper Syndicate.
“! CROSS-WORD PUZZLE FOR |:
THE LITTLE FOLKS
a |
Sa WUT Puree te
So tttandtthrearnrrer—te-thet-ebiehed-teate
rm te
ntal
| its at
| Strugele-as he
| The
| other
DEFINITIONS TO GUIDE you
HORIZONTAL
opposite of “brother.”
A prepdsition
Rocks
taken
from which ld and sil-
are
What the
Alabama
What
Upon
A we
(abbr
we do with our eyes
ord meaning “look “be-
rs old we
A
and other
f art of the
18, A robber
attacks ships
room o
r close
things
verb “te
who sails the
1. Spoken, not
A friend, «
Elevated
A number
28. The one-spot in a pack of Play-
ing cards,
The
written?
mpa n
railway ¢abbr.)
way is
sometimes
| written.
»
with. fruit
STA
woman.
25. A
received
essert made
of pastry filled
title a married |
- +
room’ in- which. visitors are
America (abbr.)
A Nete on the veale
New York (abbr.)
a string
Part of the
More near
VERTICAL
In this way, thus
2... prased with Oat ipen,
Towards
A short word meaning “before
de Hete-of- the scale.
. NOt thin, stout.
A song sung by
Sacred
South
29
30,
a1
34.
36
shoe
foot
one
taken
person.
poems, from
a!
of the Old Testament, recited or
book
sung
il
th Chureh
A word which means how many
|
|
persons, too are under the impres- |
sion that little flies are youlhg files!
and big ones oldvr flies, But tlite is!
a Miletake. for a Tly wever grows. A
80 it is evident that it. Would }jedm-+-fiy-begine=-as-an egg which turns!
possible for the creature te form a
“yacuum.—-Thé tr guma.iteelf-at each
step to the ceiling’ by a gtusey #Torr
that exudes from the feet, but is able
to break its hold by pushing out tittle
claws. A fiy cannot waik upon a
greasy surface. er dee grown
|
|
inte a -greb.-
KTOWSs and tare ite a
filled with a creamy fluid:
Fram this chryeatis the fly emerges |
qoite perfect: “Atte that, although tt}
tata, it never grows at all
People tink that-a har
toonemne a oy mmm Tle aN:
‘Phe-grub eats and |
enrrentisT
clea
d Winter.)
WN gS 5 oy aa
33
35
Rach (abbr,)
A word used with “either
Answer to Puzzie No. 109
Metropolitan Newspaper Service,
killa files.
t
Jt does nothing of the!
for the-clirysalia hidden in the
growed able to defy the keenest!
frost. me: far dromefrest hurting the |
fly, Wt “hetpa it, it hardens the
Ersimt wid protects the pupae from
the birds that might. otherwise dig |
out and devour it: A ighg spell ot]
Cone Will RN Or the Insect-eating
bird# that are man’s best friends and
the fij"s worst enemies,
is
for
naphesinsk —
with
} story
was
i-nignihiat
i tho
j up for shipment to the marke
Th
sup
esting in thelr mode ‘of living
argonaut, from which man
to have learned how ty buitd
sail
is
posed
and boata at sea is
equipped
two sall-like
and
Or
arms
others
in the air, six rowing
that
in
was the
he water at least
until the scientist found out differ
ently
the
the
» APReonaut, noid poet
on the top of
intil
It
salle
water
4 ugh sea or wind
to fold
and drop to tl
waiter for pf n
storm The sactenttsts
came
then -sapposed its
away
the
h, that the argonaut,
bottom of the
Trselr ty
out water yugh its respiratory
shoots it with
some
the water
yt
! r the att that the
develop Peat powers of seereey
to
8
unds
hide—from: their -dreade
me heap Mttle mé
their
know
er
The
Wit he_nrither+
f grbwing
of the
Lt they
a
sons
Notwith-
greatest
types of marine crea
source
mnay
Walers of
rid
numbers
tive
the
invest the
of tt
at
oceans and
w
The
story the-revrnes UT The
often told
a
rt true story
crow ing near the sea
very expert In pr}
rocks at
would
i
anime ing
low
try
limpeta away fr
W here ows
1 would give
hia b
Then
with onk,
ite would «
th
ome
rry limpet ar
and jet
at tt
ind
hed
he
rear hime
if at this game,
wea k “4 ta lim
» Inhabited
‘
mouth of
land the ‘Ww
1 the er
from the shell
was a prisoner
we yw
n
Al
ut wet his beak «
the
having
m the ro
wold. net let go
paid the price for his ¢
Many forms of shell fish
mankind as food. The «
cockle ar
t
kinds of
ngtives.in outlying parts of the wor
A locht-instance of this
seen at Sidney, where ann
this oming
obtained
h
so. the
time tide was ¢
impet, a
firm } ‘ whi t
and
and
peated
crow ittony
used
the
the
many
are
ste
by
clam, and the ¢ among
beat known; ut there. are
shell fish nt
ld
eate
may
jally many
ssands of cases of clams aré put
ts of
share
of
indeed it is one
world Indians to a great ex
tent in gathering the -tlama in
and of
the harvest of marine fare that 3
comfortable living
often of -the
the in which
down cut the oysters free
from. their beds. Pearls of
course are not found [tn every oyster,
ure indeed an unusual presence
these waters
give
them
You
fisheries
a
read
way
have peart
and
to
rocky
men
dive
rin that bivalve
Between the. tightly-hinged parts
of the stiell sometimes «-grain ‘of
sand or other obstruction’ works its
way in. The oyster dislikes tho
grating caused by this obstruction
and coats it over with a-amooth glos-
#y aubstance called nacre
Year by year the oyster coats the
with another coat of nacre.
a pearl is formed, and in
obstacle
In time
| some .cases the pearls grow by this,
means toa considerable size. At t
centre of each may be found the sub-
“gia Bee -which se annoyed thre oveter
that it spent years in trying to
smooth it out of ita way.
In some settlements” natives “pry
open shell fish and slip in thy metal
figures. In time the shell fish coat
too with necre. After some
years the Agures are taken out again,
and aré found to have been finely
covered with » substance that looks
like mother of pearl
It seems a cruel form of amuse-
ment, but man seldom stops to think
of that when there !s gain at hand.
We are accustomed to think that
Shell fish have little feeling, but ney -
these
use
through |
expanding |
poets and others told the world]
used |
Hiewing |
ared-}
backs, |
and |
the
could |.
in. t
be |
TO CHILDREN
MOUNTAINEERING 1S
| SPLENDID FUN WITH RAR
And Its Creatures |
BEAUTY AT END OF TRAIL
Climbing Mount Shepherd..Well Described by Holiday
Contest Entrant
“It is something to liave looked from the top of a fhountain and
to have made out the-surrounding country lying like a map at
your feet. There is-a joy in seeing the sun- going. down. to rest
i behind the Western hil But when these sights are added to a
trek in Island woods, with deer jumping across the path and
blackberries by the wayside, that spells a holiday worth remem.
bering for many -years: ;
Such isthe story told by @zgirl of thirteen years of ageowlo
enjoyed the holiday at the Saseenos district this Summer,and now+
its | Brites hor éxpericnces forthe, Holiday contests > -Simpky-told and
we delight
that
" of pure
that ton
happy amu
read the ate
in
is
ement
5 it is story
the eut-ef deera;
Oceans Have ne to mankind
. in fresh air But
“Deserts” and | sonrscives
Lantern Fish
}
|
|
! Holiday conte
the -winner~of* the
be announced
award, &
and
will
| weekly
Moore
ris
|
i }
a
week
*parkling
sho
tt
he
How
oceans
many
ot
even as the land
the
mark the progre
know
have
w life
remains
world from
solentists have what
mar pl oft
sen where no animal life exists the
the}
ts
that
“deser
people
the -world
he
contributed
entries of a
w
simply
w re r exists Weer
and bare ‘ te eatace?
are req : Ww yuthful
as of the their idays
year
got
olor 4. —_— dia-}
rdays Yet tis wreat
them
ric
enjoyment
He th
intain outing of the
they
covered there are \ ances in the iw the
These
where
deserts” winner
surfac
found
waters
lite
are usually
the
little
the
for
1 most
themse 4
ve
t
)econtain
fish
pr tog
Seaw
A MOUNTAIN RAMBLE
“Wh Hmpirea Saseenos
Benet year re trcrie th Clin
Me We ula it
‘ : the
had
to
ch
and
small
animal
bie.c2@.
waters
atures
t it
Lib — tatttey perky
are absent int Shepherd soo
atl
other
wanted
father
before
climt
rted off
My
up
been
hecause moet of
» after lun
fall
you
| sinks to
a
know
the
strange
and friends,
Ush going so late
ws not too hot for
enio We uck the
wu up and went alotg
beaten path at first. Soon wo
> great bushes of
Ike aspberric
We
ome
wo our
eve
bottdm the day
| manner we str
find a strunger existe:
j sight of man 1
knowledge
The fi
depth, much
| land land
ite pe
and
n e way
a Well
ume
urpl
of}
ar nost
j dark
the
the
7
black.
ate
huge
some
as af
Ev
above |
On
with
there ount
00 feet
| est
and
misied. Ver
thetop-—we got hopelessly mix
We were on a rock and atr ht
thead was a mass: of am bushes
and fallen trees, and the trail was
nowhere in sight. How we_evergot
| through the bushes is wonder,
| When we did we were simply covered
} with itches
the vie
seen
water
Five
and at
been
OCeCans
usual
aces) bottom
at that great
SU's rays
few
darkness
It
tests mase by aclentists the
ture I found to be abe
Fahrenheit
has not
found even
As the
beyond
depth
cannot pierce
hundred feet, it is
t the bed of the
co and” from
femperas
33 degrees |
feature ts the
ate moderate
A
a
j eternal abr
ovean ai
» very
However
amnplx.c3opald
Away to the
w from the top
Ne rue vi tester aii re tt) a
at was Victoria, look-
ing ike a Tot of white dots. The
harbor lay stretched out like a map
it our feet, the water blue and
sparkling
FY
the
WAS sure
though
north and
about
Another
enormous pressude en
depths.
Imagine a weight pressi
j chest with the force of a
that weight
for
g on
n
your }
Thén |
to
t}
t
increased
in the distance could be seen
of Juan de Fuca, and I
{ coutt- make out the wavea,
To the
west lay an. endless vista
of hills, blue at- thelr tops with the
There fs still Hife even atthe ¢reat~ valleys grey with mist. ——
= ’ getting Tate and the sun was set-
depths found b and tad
iia; Wikemens z } tine.
call Sponges trieved
and over
growing
propor-
prolific
many
waters
ar
j imag ne Straita
te
frame
of the pres
sea floor.
many
our
“a
the
ns square inch of |
some |
at
ve the others could not
of
water
¢
for
y man
“n
miles
ereatur
Soon
found the trall
at the drinking
iee cold water,
maidenhatr ferr
We saw a re l we
| struck off the t It bounded right
across the path front of By
“A ttie time we reached home we were
tired out, but all of us agreed woe
had had’ aright happr-day.*
Contributed by May Moore,
thirteen, 3249 Quadra Street,
started down again
We
a
get
I saw
we and
stopped
drink of
a ly
| from
They
depths of
living
infancy to
Where
a floor,
creatures wh
carr down
These
strange to loo
Stand.the
which they
fand round
four
fasier
hole
and
that
are
7m their fullest
life is
inhabited by
on what the
> them
love
surface
Is
live
se
deer fs
ail
in us
deep-sea are
k at, and built to with
enermour pressure uniter
ve. They globular|
for the most part, and} =
j many queer illuminati of | torla, B.«
| their own, as if cach fish =| tate that
jing its food by the light own | Of @ trap
lanterns
Many have a welrd-form of ftash }
ing lure which they raise above their| made with the.coze brought up from
heads to attract’ their_prey. In the| the bed of the Invariably. it
darkness of the sea floor it would not|is found to be cold, The “deserts”
|
|
| be difficult to mistake this lure for} are markéd by red clay, which is a
}
} creatures
|
i
Ih aged
Vi
are
have ne
we they have been the victims
of
its
Many interesting tests have Heer
orean
some choice morsel of fool, and othe r| voleapic life laid ‘there by age-old
fish-go for it, only to Jearn when too ¢oleanoes mow probably urider water,
AGES, Wangeeeceeeeee SS
GRAND OPERA MONK
;
}
ertheless think of the pains at whien |
ah oyster goes fo coat a grain of
sands so that it will-not scrape and
Y it year” ‘After year. Food,
mone und “CTO Thdeed, come
from the quiet dépths ofthe oceans
of- the world,
ry
It_is.seldom that-a-monkey—getk ints grand opera circles but this one
did. The fivorite playmate of the monkey is the cat shown beside it,
both curious to know what the cameraman was makine all ‘the fuss
abou
wee cate,
SRA coon
cadence
IFS bE EEN RAL BAR SS
ome
—*
%,
ney were Nn A MEINE I PHL
OME INTERE:
ACTIVITIES _
PF orty Elephants” Is Name Of
- Gang of Clever Women Crooks
Band of Tall Women in Lo
4 Scotland Y
ndon Commit Many Crimes;
ard on Trail
London, Oct. 10.—Scotland Yard is‘now engaged on the task
“of rounding up an. amazing gang of women’ crooks and black-
mailers operating in London, who are known by the bizarre name
of ‘‘The Forty Elephants,’’.
Working principatly in the West End and on racecourses, “The
—==Morty, Elephants’? have for some'time been responsible for rob-
beries by violence, bldckmait; shoplifting-and housebreaking,
TALL WOMEN
Recently a number of exception-
And thelr hats, shoes and other ap-
parel are of the finest quality.
-| for
biackmall.and huge sums have
been extracted as the price of their
silence. :
The haunts of. young thieves are
found out and after the “Elephants”
have ‘relieved them of all the ready
money they possess an “arrange-
ment” is come to wheréby the gang
receive a certain percentage of “tak-
ings.” A young crook who fell foul
of the gang a short while ago was
arrested and gent to prison. The
“Elephants” had “shopped” him, He
did-not know it, but it was because
he fitted to carry out his bargain
with the “Elephants” that informa-
tion of his activities was sent to
the police. X
BLACKMAIL METHODS
The methods adopted by the Black- {
mall squad of the gang ure typifie
by ther folowing. inatance,>.A--well- |
dressed min and woman In an ex-
hensive car drove up to a well-
Se Ee Aa
Was
BP ea RTRSY
CTORIA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925
4
As Richard Mansfield’s Widow Trains
New Age of Actors In Historic Home
(OMENS CLUB
ORGANIZATIONS
‘Is a Husband Responsible For
| English City Set by the Ears by Bank Manager's Wife}
Husband's Position Jeopardized —
That moot question, to what extent is a husband responsible
| for the actions of his wife, has taken a new angle in Great Britain,
| There the feminists are much agitated over an issue which hag
arisen through the political activities of a bank-manager’s. wife,
It is a time-honored rule in British banking circles that-a ban
managér must not participate in politics, but it has never bee
thought necegsary to. extend the prohibition—to-their—wives unt
| recent events in the city of Nottingham breught.it to a head.,
His Wife’s Political Views? ©
any F aap aes SET CITY BY EARS
SOCIETY BRIDE’ we et se anc win
-} - |
ally tall women have been charged |
at London pollee—courts with as-
sault. Owing to insufficient evidence
further charges could not be brought
against them, but it was well known
known West End hotél A footman
seated beside the driver alighted and
opered the door of the car and bowed
the handsome palr into the— hotel.
The couple proceeded to the dining-
CLOTHES FOR NOTHING
.But—no milliner, modiste or tewel-
ler’s establiahment benefits by their
Bulwell (Nottingham) branch of th@
patronage, They never_pay for the |
Westminster Bank was a Mr, Willan
to the police that they were mem-
bers of “The Forty Elephants.”
Special efforts are being made to |
secure the conviction of their lead-|
er, whose nickname is the “Diamond
is
known as “Diamond Queen Annie,”
Queen.” To her tntimates she
and she is the “brains” of the gang.
Every member of “The. Forty .Ele-
phante™-reperta ts her and her ef-
fictent “becret- service brings—her—im-
mediate newa
of a good “crib,”
or
jthings they wear. Experts at shop-
| 1itting, they depend on thetr wite
for thelr adornmegt, Some of the
articles are taken from the Weat
End stores, others are ordered and
sent to an address which has been
specially obtained for the occasion
One of the women is to-day wear-
jing a diamond ring worth £600 which
she” calmly “appropriated -whtie—en=
thusiastically admiring others whieh
were delivered “on &Dpro* at-en-a
thé afrival of a person who can be | COMmModation address within: halr-an
blackmailed or rabbed.
USED AS DECOYS
Thirty of the forty women are-dig
handsome women about six feet
in
hour, and were never seen again!
| Another‘of the “Elephants”
| weeks ago ordered a fur coat
at a thousand
a few
priced
guineas which was
—.~ heights -~the-—rematning "ten THe ,eentto on odidress “for her husband's
=
shorter.
gang are used @s decoys, and
the “eyes” of the organization; when
a house fs beltig burgied or « per-
son held up, these smaller women
remain on guard and give a warning,
. should it be necessary to those oper-
ating thé “stant.” e
These women hay
wave “photographic” |
““jiemories and know nearly all the
detectives in London, but they never
take an active part in the exploits
of the gang, Without. them the gang
could not work, and their only fune-
tion is to make themselves familiar
with police changes, and act as de-|
coys or guards,
A few weeks ago one of these de
coys chatted to a policeman in the
most innocent manner and kept his
attention closely engaged
twenty minutes answering questions
on various subjects. ‘The constable’s
reward for his politeness came-a lit-
tle later, when {t was found that a
burglary bead been committed on his
“teat” ter tite verter ring rhaotutery
no tracés,
All of “The Forty
fashionably dressed. They wear the
latest in ottdoor and evening dress,
Moreover, they enhance their charms
by a resplendent array of jewelry,
Flephants” are
The petite members of the
are
for some
approval.” The “husband” approved
of tt and the messenger was asked
to send in the bill Hie demanded
(the money on the spot, and when
this was refused he went
policeman While gone
woman and her “husband” left
uddresg and—were not seen acelin
In this case the “husband”
ee ol the were experts ting ies:
The women dress as women or men
aecording to the “job” on hand. The
majority, being of tall stature, are
easily able to pass themselves off as
members of the opposite sex, and so
well do they carry out the apparent
hangwe that only in one or two in-
stances has suspicion been aroused
“CAT” BURGLARY
| Three of the gang, in
male evening dreas, recently
out a “oat” burglary in the Weeat
End, while others, as temporary”
men, have even helped to swell the
| numbers of a certain race gang.
|, West End-hotels- and-night -ciubs
are the fevertte hunking grounds
of the blackmail section of the gang,
and itis from this section that “The
Forty Elephants” look for their
ready money. Any .slight indiacre-
tion by a well-known person is seized
upon by them as an opportunity
he was
faultiess
carried
DRE
MA ne at
t.925 by The
New Modes for Old in the Wearing
of Evening Clothes
Real fidwers—not artificial flowers |
to adorn evening gowns constitute |
one of the ntw whims -of.-fashior
This does not mean, of céiurse, that
velvet and satin will no longer bloom
gloriously on evening frocks. It just
Means. that
find an intrepid woman of fashion
here.and_there you wilt |
who hae adopted the eustom of wear- |
ing real flowers with her evening
frocks, To do this she must have
a -Hberal drees-atiowance or suitors
devoted enough to Keep her supplied
in the flowers required
ticular frock she has chosen to wear
One French woman who revived
the fashic wearing real flowers
in the while ago
even went pains of having
fresh ight ta her during
the course of a- single - evening's
party When bunch of orchids
showed signs of fading she would
go to the dressing-room long enough
to don fresh ones in their ‘phice
However, it is quite possible to
wear artificial flowers- throughout
an evening in cool weather without
having them fade too much. This
is especially true when the flowers
are placed—as they are out of pret-
erence” nowadayson™ the shoulder
where they need not be crushed at
all when dancing. To wear enor-
mous rosea on your- shoulder ie a
fashion you’ may like to follow.
Then you must adopt that. other
little trick of letting your evening
cape slide off your shoulder so as
not to crush the flowers, Even
when your flowers are artificial you
must let your cloak hang’ off your
shoulder.s0..as.not to miss them.
This you must da, moreover, even
im Midwinter—when you ‘needs (must
hu
to the motér car “that carries you
home.
For ovce the younger Women
are wearing their hair quite plain
Tor the @vening, although every one
seems to be agreed that there is
something rather Incongruous in
the frilly eventing clothes that have
come into prominence now, and the
sleek boyish haircut. Perhaps this
is one of the iIncongruities that
fashtinr relishes. ‘Someone recently
sald that for a woman to wear. sleek
evening
eve
to the
flowers bre
one
ook -for-s man to wear evening coat
Sd waistcoat with fourpluses, Un-
‘
Reyes pa iran
|
by the par-/
/
|
from theatre or festive house
This evening cape of brocade of
green, purple and silver, ie allowed
to droop over one shoulder ‘in order
to show the bunch of real ~violete
worn on the shoulder of the green
shiffon gown. 2
doubtediy. “But then “fashionable
wotten” HkVeaiways delighted in
such rather amusing incongruities.
to fetch a}
the |
the
was)
yoont afd occupied a table that had?
been reserved by telephone... |
After the meal they left -the room}
by eclreultous route, and passing
table the woman knocked the
arm of a diner. As he looked round
she whispered a few words, nodded |
towards the door of the hotel
passed on
a
one
and
Outside the woman waited In the}
hed having disappeared. |
| Present: lythe—diner whose arm had
beer knocked-came out of the horet
jand the waiting motor-
} car woman's invitation he
got in and the car drove off. A quar-
ter of an hour later he was back
fir the hotet“narying parte wir
; very considérable sum of
He had been seen to er
hotel -with a woman who was
This wife, and word had been
The driver
and the
all women who had
| watching the Vietliisince “he~was?
first seen taking the woman who |
waa not his wite to dinner and a}
theatre.
PERSONAL VIOLENCE
The “Forty Elepha not}
only dangerous in the knowledge
they pogsess ahd their extraordinary | ‘
ability in stéaling. They are dan |THE shadow of Ridvard Mansfield
gerous in the fact that if their de again falls over the tree-hidden
mands are not obeyed they resort! Mansfield estate at New London.
to personal violence. It is known}
that many of the women carry razors
in their corsage, in their shoes, and
also tn°their garters, Many cases of
people being assaulted and slashed
with razors have come to light, but
there are twice as many that do not,
|for the reason that the person at
[tacked wir dorenything-te-evetd rat
Heity. ;
Avery young West
was recently asked by one of the
gang for certain information. He re
fused it, with the result that ten
minutes later, as he was passing
down a quiet street, thrde women
seized him, and stood him on his
head while he waa relieved of all/the great ‘Richard, has determined
his personal belongings. This treat-|to revive the traditions estab-
ment, having failed to extract the | lished
\ outs information, he Was caned|; And where, she asks, would one
with his own walking stick and flung/find a better place than that which
Linto. the gutter. seems almost haunted by
i it -= i Mansfield?
| Household Hints |
/ “Il bave noticed it ever so many
jtimea—I mean the somewhat psychic
Being exposed to air causes a cut
lemon to go mouldy, so place the un-
influence these rooma have upon vis-
used portion under a tumbler for
itors,” she related, sitting in the
| gloom of the vast music room: which
future use. It will keep In good con-
dition for some days
car erncort
approached
At the
money
er the
not}
passed |
of the!
male
|}to headquarters
the footman,
excort were
beer
are
Mansfield Grange it is called, and
ite walls buzs once tore with theat-
rical activities after a silence dat-
ing from the death of the master
actor of his day.
From time to time his widow, Bea
trice Cameron-Mansfleld,has rested
| quietiy. at..the Granedteam.heo.war
relief work in Byrope and there have
been intermittent ealons of ‘artista
and writers.
But now the picturesque mansion
has sprung to life, summoned’ Into
new activity by the call of old stage
traditions.” For Mra. Mansfield, who
Was leading lady as well as wife to
End habitue
he
is crowded with tapestries, armor-
plate and rare antiques from many
parts of the world. From the walls
of this room a life-sized, malevolent
Shylock watches craftily, .with
Use hot milk instead of cold when | other painting of Mansfield undis-
mashing potatoes,~‘and they wilrpguised
+maeh-ameoothiy-and-quickly. “Recently a young lady who
studied for the stage. came to yisit
and; -walking into the réom, seemed
an*
An excellent solf- soap fer cleans-
ing purposes ie made by keeping 4
two-pound earthenware jam-jar
three-parts filled with watér on the]
side of the sink in the scullery and}
dropping soap ris into it. The re-
sulting soap je ean be added
small quantities to cleaning water
or it may be mixed with sufficient |
powered whitening to form stiff
paste, which can be used for clean
ing and polishing plate and glass.
REPORT DENIED
a
Powdered borax will get rid of
cockroaches if used every night for
two or three weeks.. Scatter it round
thelr holes, over. the floor, on shelves
and wherever the creatures are
known to congrogate. )
New lace curtains, prints and call-|
coesn are troublesome to wash the!
first time, because of the lime in
them... They. should..be soaked all
night in warm water in which two |
or three handfuls of salt have been
dissolved. This frees the dressing
and renders the washing easier.
To preserve mint for Winter use, |
gather it when dry, and then strip |
the leaves from the stalks, Wash
them in a little vinegar agd press
lightly into a screw-top bottle. Add
a little sugar, fill up with vinegar,
cover” tightty;~and keep -in 2 -cool;
dry place.
New boots and shoes improve -by
being kept a short time before they
are worn. Don't be too iiberal with
polish when cleaning them, aa it is
apt to dry on and cake, preparing the
way for cracks.
Keep tinned foodstuffs tn a cool,
dry place, and never leave any for
future ‘use in an cpened tin. As
soon a tin is opened, turn the
contents into a dish. :
PRINCESS ASTRID
youngest daughter of the: Duke of
Ink stains on colored material are/ Vestergoetiand, Sweden, whoss re-
best removed with a mixture of sour
fiflk and Poller’s arth... Great. care: Ported. engagement to_ Crown.
must be taken to wash out the milk | Olaf of Norwiy wae officially
after the stains have been removed. « few days axa
the aplrit |
for a moment to be
‘Why, you almost
Mansfield'’s presence!’ she
}I had often thought the
j but wag inclined to
intimacy of
imost dazed
can feel Mr. |
remarked
thing
it to the
same
credit
association |
|
person |
after
psychological ef
“Rit when person
commented on this
fect It began to take a somewhat
linystical significapge, and 1
} wander if 4. might not
students of the drama who s
{in its atmosphere—if perhaps,
all, an influence from beyond
grave-might not be felt.”
t
began |
ffect |
on
And that there}
lithe com
it came about
was went out from this
munity recently a ‘rather busitese
ike announcement that “the Rich
ard Mansfield Players of New -in-
| don had been incorporated and a
school for the drama opened by Mre.|
Mansfjeid at the Grange. ‘
“In the old days it was well known
in the show world that Mr. Mans
field inculeated in all the young
factors about him-the fine old tradt-
tions for which he stood,” Mra.
| Mansfield continued..”“To act Shake
| speare, for tnetance, to have
| sthdied ail one could find about the
period, the customs, the furnishings, |
the surroundings of the time
Place in which a play was lsid tt
Was a matter of getting Into the role
through acquaintance and psycholo-
gical understanding:
“To-day, alas, there is too much
hit-and-miss in the theatre, and its
training. Little is left of the old tra~ +
was
FOR BREAKFAST
Cinnamon Rolls
Take ‘Your
bread dough, when ready
Roll out to one
Sprinkle with
sugar and one
Make into a long]
cut inte eighteen |
|
cups (two . pounds)
to shape
loaves. halt
thickness
tablespoon
cinnamon
even roll and
pleces Set c
cut surface down, in a “buttered
pan, and let rise until fully twice)
their bulk. Butter tops and
sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar
Bake -in a quick oven twenty to}
| twenty-five minutes }
|
Bread Rolls |
Having made wheat bread, take)
apiece of dough the size of an|
| ordinary loaf; knead it about
| twice as long as directed for the
bread; form Tt into "even, ~ amatll
balls and place in greased gem
} pans, Cever and set in a warm
corner until risen very light, a
little more than twice their orig-
} inal bulk, then bake in a’ moder
ately quick oven for about wenty
to twenty-five minutes. Watch and!
turn then that” they~-may~-brown}
evenly. ‘
German Coffee Cake
One-fourth cup “bitter,
fourth cup lard, one cup
tWo eggs, One .cup yeast, or one-!
half cake compressed yeast, ohe-.|
haif pint milk; Cream the pbutter,|
lard and sugar well, then add eges, |
yeast and milk. Flour enough to |
make a stiff dough, so it can just}
be handled with a spoon. Let it)
stand over night. When light put)
into shallow pans, brush -with
melted butter; spread sugar, cin-}
namon and" chopped.almonds -over
the dough. Put in a warm place
to tise; and when Nght wake Ina
moderate}y—hat .cven from twenty
minutes to half an hour
into
inch
half
spoon
one
together, with
one-
sugar,
, dition
\Werstand and
| while
ldo its part,—tor
Mrs. Richard Mansfield ae she appears to-day and (right) as she looked, when plaWing opposite her husband.
It is rush and scramble. An
while I believe in the modern dram
and applaud what
the old
allowed to die. Few of its adherent
re left—Mr. Sothern, Mr
Mr. Arliss anda few others, Th
younger generation may not feel it,
it
believe
“Perhaps here’ T
handful more fb carry
are but a
may gather
on. If ther
who can #ee and un
ite sensitive In appre
think will wort
old Grange hete wi
thé actors will iv
beneath this roof and be constant!
inded by that
the perac ty of
into it and
start a great
few
fation—I
An@ the
be
purr
which
atmospher
Mr. “Mans
who
artist.”
She led the way through the hich
cellinged rooms, as talked
through the hallway ita.. print
of red-coated hunters.
library with its wealth of researc
books, up the stairway and into th
bedroom of the dead artist
Here was a stage obviousiy set b
the master hand and untouched sinc
hie death Here wealt
of- age-faded stars <
yeater~ye Mansfield
bundle. thre
with caressin
half .a dozen
a very young gir
now as a queen, now a Portle
how @s a Juliet—and a very your
man, with génius burning in
and a fast-fading .signature
my Beatrice, from Richard
field has put
we may
she
with
too, were a
pictures
Mrs.
litle
searched
fingers selecting
They. showed
ar
duced one
which she
as
eyer,
‘To
THE GIRL WITH THE GOLDEN SHAWL
Phiesdeseka> Vanna vat Ti ES wNasuAT Rouen hued costume WIth
which-nightly she dazzles the eyes of audiences at-oneof New York's
popular. revues,
is doing, I don't
traditions should be
Hampden,
knows,
through the
pro-
his
|Shepherd. He seéma to have pursucg
| the even tener of his way in atric#
with banking practice,
| accordance
local
DEFIED MANY =: = Soe oe
SUPERSTITIONS ===
Saturday Night. Last year
| she was elected a member of the
| Nottingtfam City Council; and pres
= ently was at “outs” with some or her
masculine colleagues. Her next stey
Was to organize “The Nottinghant:
Ratepayers’ Vigilance Society” to
fight for “probity and efficiency” in
municipa) affairs; the inference of
course being that “probity” was ab-
sent,_In fact Mrs. Shepherd used her
Lord Glenconner’s Bride Mar-|
ried-on Friday Without
Veil
| London, Oct. 1 One ofthe. im-
portant” Rovtety-weidinerof-the-year-
attracted considerable aftention re
cently by réason of the bride's flout-
ing of many old supersitions
ciated with weddings. The bride was
Miss Pamela Paget, second daugh-
of Sir Richard Paget,. Bart., and
lady Muriel Paget, O.B-E., daugh-}
of-the—tateKart~ of "Winchelsea
and Nottingham, and the bridegroom
wae_lord Glenconner son of Vis-
countess Grey of Falloden,
At thelr marriage at Wells Cattie-
dral, the bride Giscarded the tradi-
tional wedding veil and wore only a
wreath of flowers, while she further
defied superstition by being married
on a Friday and choosing peacock
Solora of blue, gold and green for)
her bridal retinue.
Her bridal gown was of medieval /
design: in gold and white brocade,
made in picturesque etyle by Lady
Egerton.
‘lady Mary -Stickiand’s. small son,
a|}Guy, wh Master Harold Tennyson,
e|#0n and heir of the Hon. Lionel and
Mrs. Tennyson, and nephew of Lord
tencanner, were the pages; dressed
in on and gola seventeenth cen-
ijtury costumes Four childreh fol-
e |lowed them, and six bridesmaids, to
ylcomplete the procession,- were Miss
| Sylvia Paget and her sister, Miss_An-
Miss Sheila Clifton, Miss
Alison Tennant, Miss Nancy Ten-
nant and Lady Mary Thynne, the
beautiful daughter of the Marquis of
Bath.
fears and discredit her fellow-coun-
clllors, by holding weekly open-air
meetings in the market place of Note
| tingham, sacred to the memory of
Robin Hood Presumably she
charged that unltke the outlaw, the
connciliors robbed the poor and werg
guilty of other. grave offences,
CUSTOMERS DENOUNCED
If so happened that tie pu aes]
counts .of the civic corporation, and’
also the private accatints of many of
the councillors and aldermen are care
ried by the ldcal branch of the Weste
j}minster Bank; and Mra, Shepherd'’d
militancy made matters decidedly un«
comfortable for Mr. Shepherd in hig
capacity as mknager, since his best
customers were being deriounced ag
crooks._Finally the rumpus reached
the ears of the authorities . at
head office of the Westminster Bang
in London; and after due considerne
tion they arrived at a truly Brit\st]
expedient. They could not hold Ma
Shepherd responsible for his wife'@
campeign,- and apparently regarded
him as a valuable and desefving offi«
cial; so they transferred him to @
managerial post. well out of England
in tho little Isle of Man. To take any
color of censure out of the transaction
they raised his salary; and there the
matter would have perhaps rested
had not Mrs. Shepherd decided ta
make-a larger issue of it and rous@
the womanhood and the press of Eng.
land to a sense of the tyranny of
banking corporations.
In response to. a public agitation,
an effort was made to induce Dn
Walter Leaf, chairman of the Londons
County Westminster and Parr’s Rank,
a world famous financier and clissical
authority, to receive a deputation. Iq
refusing, Dr; Leaf wrote as followsg
“It would be impossible to allow
| the bank's policy {6 be swayed by the
currents of local polit! and it is
essential that we should keep our~
selves jndependent in our internal
administration.”
LOVE OR DUTY
Mrs. Shepherd and her Vigianeg
Society. continue to issue’ manifestog
to the British public denouncing the
bank for her “victimization,” but the
vank remeins ebdurate. Detalls of the
victimization” illustrate the crisi@
j which~has evidently arisen in: the
| Shepherd menage The’ alternative
which confronted Mrs, Shepherd wad
to accompany her husband to his now
post, or to stay in Nottingham ang
stick by her Vigilance Society. Ig
hat she deemed 4 conflict between
love and duty, she chose the latter,
She stays on fn Nottingham and, os
London Truth puts it: “The Isle of
Mans’ loss Nottingham’s gain}
though possibly the rugged Manxmea
fare not fully appreciative of the de«
privation they suffer. The gist of the
charge of “victimization” is that th¢
Shepherds must from now on supporg
two homes. This charge seems hard«
ily justified. ‘The bank is not coms
| pelling Mrs. Shepherd. to stay in Note
tinghath, -although possibly rellevog
| in spirit that she has elected to dg
[aes and sq fat—as-the documante #9
; the case indicate, the husband hime
selfis making no complaint,
HUSBAND'S RESPONSIBILITY
| In the agitation going off in fomine
| ést circles in England, it is urged thag
\in these days of enfranchised womea
| husband ought ‘not to. be held re.
‘TSPOHSIDTS TSF “hile” Wifes” conceptions
of her duties as a citizen. But as @
matter of fact, vote or no vote,
| husband is held responsible for hig
wife's goings-on, as a matter of come
mon tradition. It has always been
| possible for an indlacreet and aggrese
late woman-to-injure-ber-husbard
asso
ter
ter
4
a
e
h
©
.|gela Paget,
Poking a fire seems a simple busti-
ness, yet there is a right and a
wrong way of doing it, The wrong
way is to pound the coals from
above. the right to push the poker
in underneath, and by clearing
the burnt athes leave room
draught of air’ to pass through the
fire, so allowing it to burn brightly
h
e
y| out
for a
h
of
When packing to leave home a
woman always puts boots and shoes
and all heavy objects-at the -bot-
i, [tom of her trunk, and. the. lighter
articles on top This is the right
to pack, and if men followed
the same example thete would be
fewer, cracked shirt fronts and
creased suite at a journey'’s end.
«
a,
g | way
“
is
interests ii any sphere of life—an
Mr. Shepherd who gets a better salary
out of Ahe rumpts may consider hime
|self rather lucky. Undoubtedly any
| Canadian’ bank would have pursued
ja similar policy with regard to @
branch manager, unless ft decided te
dismiss him altogether. The Notting.
7h oA RRR EEE
+
the Married Woman in poiltles in @
Poa
the ,,
| putaheas She cannot -have it bott
bestvenrdervore to set the ct Pr ting
ham-case puts the whole-question of — —
6
By-GRACE. TORREY.
fRish-school
cement Mabel
the Land
Laughing Water.”
she
com-
sang
the
of
As
encere gay ~The
Afterward: Mrs.
, wife the pres
First. National Bank
that she had heard
atar sing’ “The _F
the two she prefe
‘She said to te
"comparison. !
you know.”
They were ii th
tik the crest;
the f ie'the
Innis her
timidly waa
ot-herself
famous star.
“The
“Hadn't
oysters?”
of ant of thr
world
‘-and that of
Mabel
u there
thought
was po
' rd let
pass pantry get-
ers. ready. for
room. Mrs
1
to
a
seniors front
kissed
It
ughter
ng
af world-
us the
we pat “she s
we better «lish
up
Mabel was appraising
cream sauc
prem tert dee
rep tte
M
n fnto
MABEL TAKES THE
Inr ther
PLUNGE
proud
ivKe
they
Almost
rms
elding
mother
Ma
the
nhe
paid
littlé white ‘ . took it
we
dollars. *
sona of Pr
New. York
great Figlion«
planned debut,’ Extraordinary q
ram | came
mind Couk
sell the Hitt
made this
what? Where
apare her the
would he come
“Why, Herbie
reproached his de
‘Be wonderful to- knc
helped me tows what _tve-always
dieamed.cof do Toward
meant so much to mother?”
Three days later Mabel
jes
oto
1 th
ns plexed
in to
she
ork
could
question
then
not
M
ut
bel's le
s. “Wouldn't it
w that you had
ra
what
stood
under the soaring dome of the creat/
waiting-room of the Pennsylvania
Station, she felt that she was at last
“ypon a worthy threshold: The
impersonal efficiency of thix place
“ith tts smart crowds, tte-untformed
officials, seemed & prophecy -of. her
augumented futuré,
‘Then Margie fell upon her noek
with gaspings of friendly rapture
“Mabel. if -you aren't « sight
sore eyes. Pinky: This is Mabel.”
Pinky Was a manty young woman
who gave Mabel a strong handicap
andt-assumed her — bag ———
“We'll go_over to Firth and take
~@ bus,” said Margie. “Tes, euch
Vast
an
Howard
told ‘her mother |
famous
little
think |
the}
iundred | ¥
ly eyes |
for |
nice
Yeu're
Way to” begin.
Oh, Mabel
Boing to love .
it,” ‘
she said, and gave
beautiful smile. Margie
was just girl of no distinguished
} talent, who was graduated from high
school two yeurs earlier than Mabel
She had taken a biisiness course and
had gone to New York two or three
years ago. She was private secretary
néin‘Wall Street. She was
a the. theatrical. crowd. At
least riimor suggested the outlines
| Of Utese facts. Mabel had written
to-her for advice about her ‘own tm-
pending,.entry, and had. recelved_an
atr-mreth-tetter- offering her the free-
| Herbie wonderful dre
dom of ~Margie’s apartment, the
tre of her theatriest gre and} “Lambie dear," said Rose
“have you some food néws for me
inside track to fame * ‘
The evening's programme, Mar-| LorillardMorgan. shifted. ever
gle, outlined it; between squeezes of | Sen, thatthe —white-—arm
Mabel's hand, as they sat together on med resting rather on the
“top of the bus, was exélting, The)
would go to Margle’s-apartmoent. Stie
and Pinky tt, but there was
mi fe They had, in fac
been casting abo r the right third
Mabel waa heaven-sent
er viewing the
‘It's wonderful,
Margie her
a
to some
in- with
bwas darkeo. New Yerk men, too, #he
Gided, had a way of dressing that
jcould_ give even Herbie hints, And
1
‘
Was &
the
Py
as
to be
As she read the
seemed pleased
i Lambie,”
the prince
pocket an envelope.
enc ire
shared
third
a she
" t be
You are a goo ahe
the _not¢
Figlione
ten
said,
It ds
elve
tossing
d
tpartment af from
me
see.”
Lambl«
do
a
have din shall
i
then
Margie gasped
these
tickets
“How
things?
Whirlpoot,”
do
you marvelo
"The
16
ke rst, for
pr
Marel
d-the
landmar
that’s
Then
TERT
g from
tala bh
ttage
Halfwa
plungec
mi ober
I
. mad
!
s sanlone y
difficult to
told Mabel ne
if walled
Heside
Torr
down
n
they was met
diy
weeks&
a slim,
Te wry
t of
arranged
she
Y te wat
emer Riba) Gtisls) Si) s
1 Jetty
ineicte
ahe
r nto. wt pocket
Ma
om
mante nd
rgan was study
iplece .
ard M
he
if Td known
hour for y
A-BUILDER OF VOICES
I Pat a =
THE CORRUPT PRESS
Pre
xTA
on vers
Loriliar
i M
thought
New
r 0
had
Vasnka
thet
la Ma
epa
it
organ
“was
dance
prin
Stanl
that.”
eryday . when he
b
orn
maki
ar 1 or
Bure
player
plays,
Stanley
erbie that st missed
new an
on Rose
=
‘iuppearir
2 pi
Mabel
"There
that
} wish
ing is so
One of
so here
I
Writ
are many
different,”
things
wrote
it them
town between tours
say: “You
mn Mabel
yur next stellar himinary.”
Stanley. tu! her haggard
Under the
was un
are
she
we could talk abo
d.”
the things
liked talk about
ley donbted it
kind of woman Herble woult admire
That might be overlooked in one who
Was artiste. What. Mabel had
liked most had been that Miss Stan
ley had not praised her singing. Mar-
at ‘length Itnquired }gie had gasped Pinky had said,
“ET hope'so,” said Mabel. A moment | “(jreat work, kid!”
earlier she would have confidenly Even. Lorillard Mérgan
} without suggestion
ter in his eyes, that while anyone
teoula see her as she sang, ft was
airficuit to Yeremver that tre shoutd
listen rather than took. 4
“Will sing some time again,”
want to keep your. eye ¢
She’ have
Stan
the
would
was Rose
Rowe
she
turned
on Mabetl's
ymeed scrutiny her melanc y
Mabel’ knew the first uncer-
tainty her life as to ber own sig
nificance in the scheme of the’ unt-|
erse. ou are artiste?” Miss Stan
to
St« were
eyes,
af dis
jiey
|
had. told
}answered yes of. laingh
; “What is your metier?” Miss Stan~
ley Mt her second cigarette andt-blew
| its smoke reflectively In Mabet's face.
| “I sing, coughed Mabel
}"Ob.” Miss Stanley created further
e screens. “You shall sing. for) he asked, “while IT shut my eves?
me,” she: commanded, rather than| She did not tell Herbie that,
Then the Currupt Presa arrived | that Rose Stanley had —not—said
land all interest centred on him complimentary word. After “Si mes
| NotKing, Mabel instantly decided, | vers,” she had even sald, “You must
feoutd be more Merbie's opposite than tearn’ French.”
\ the Corrupt Preas. Herbie, mag-| After the aria, she had said, “You
nificent viking, with blonde hatr and! must work with my friend, Pietro
Hassive sioulders, Would Mave made) Cent He may know tow to” ad™ -
two of rs i |
“His real name is Lorfilard Mor-|in a féw days, that the andition with
gan,” Margie éxplained. - “His an-/} Pietro Cenct hod passed oft: gtor<
|cestors planned Plymoutti Rock and ‘fously and that she ‘was an accepted
wrote the constitution of the United | pupil, rate twenty an hovr,
| States He has a B.A. degree or| paid in advance. Cenci had been
something tertible Hike that. Bat hel more than kind. —He -had_told her
works for the New York ‘Press, and }.that he Was-a builder of- voices, and
we call #4erthe Corrupt Press. Cute,| wollt wa three half tones to her
isn't he?” bupper register within tliree months.
“T am a seep in wolf's clothing, ! Professor Timmy's methods had been
Miss Innis,” said the Corrupt Press.) totally inadequate and, in fact,
Those who: knew and love me call | roneous, The tone was neither
+ tre -Lambte,”* ~--threwn forward against the teeth nor
| Herbie, Mabel thowght, would have | felt against the eyebrows.
ter, &
you
emo!
nor
a
}
|
,
}
}
dollars
back of his chair than ‘on his shoul-{told her, as he bowed her out in his
| der,-2s tre-handed her from an-inner Polite, foreign manner,—te- leave -all
ane |
Mahel was able to let Herbie Know,
ere)
f
+
me
VICTORTA DATLY TIMES, SATURDAY,
oa
‘
OCTOBER 10, 1925
wenn
made. .bjyqkroleasor Timmy. had.re-,
gembled these sounds, As an: emin-
ent exponent of bel -canto, he spoke
to her .of_timbre and tonal beauty
as no qne had ever spoken,
-~ Mabel teft the stuiilo treading -on
air
Metros
wished to .make
She had told him that
her debut—at
tolitan in six months, an
to Him. f
A#g she walked toward the elevator,
t
Fr
id t
with
at
she
the
cou
her
The
gering
sharin
apart
night
erutt
paving
for it,
ex-!
sliced
around
Fre
way
neh
whose
of
ight
eneh
somewhat
and
” had at three
tutor whom
disposal
sum total
It. made
g Margie's
ent, that had
seemed rather crowded
q Mirey atid Tinkie
a hundred dollars a m
a batgain for
seriousl
doltiars an }
he eould f¢
rather
decide
Was
her
on her
colossa
Mabel heard Margie
on Mabel.
id herself, she
iris for
ham for d
the
pastry
corner, topping
tt
it off*
aptece
off
they
Wer
H. Cc
had onc
beating o
advances
she
the
d he
y of
Italian tessons that {=
20ur, |
ince |
StAg- he
upon
drawing-room
first |
and}
+
were |
onth
i
New
eay?
She's our next stellar luminary.”
we
the chance bi
liceteasen
with
a good
cL.
aced
by the initiation banariet in- Carrie's
ceHar
Mill
gic,
ings.
“*
earns
jel
T
She
a week
ideas f
royaltt
"inky had her eye on
ship, o
open
while
three ¢
society
“She
they
for an
.
“She
| Margte's favorite introduction
roing
she’
moat £
It w
to add,
in New-York”
Mueh
pursue
)IWVITSa- FUESHIT.
i
aT)
like
to
ires you.” said
of
working
step
think
t
er
t
t
and
apiece
And Margie ull
or little plays would
. when she got ther
bond.
of the most
days for
welcomed
lollars month
Pinky rt
rs thirty da
valued cler
had
at
sort
On, wri
ne lucrative
n. M
Mabel's th
well
here won
they
n as as
s our millionaire
old the friends drifte
evening by the fireplace
has money in the bank,”
who
on the
time.”
six weeks before
“Resides,
at Metropo
any
AS
; she's the best
as
d by
it annoyed Mabel
this reputation, she
The wold
to
Tashi
Mar
hese |
girl
ry
HE MILLIONAIRE BOARDER
Nar
ars
of
coin |
tten
8
ean-
lines |
irty-
|
4
ter,”
d in}
was
“And
litan
she began
cook
he
had
or
rain struck her cheek as she stepped
fifth
She w
+Out—of
glitter
the
decaying candle
garrets,
SHOP aed “erottees “trrowhtetr= the
malf hour: with
as healthily
the
of
Pietro ©
hungry and
mood for the
& automat, or Childs’
light of t
cehars, Tred herses,
off the bus, on her return from her
enci
yet,
poreelain
*, or
hose
ten
\three of them had snatehed food out
,;of the mouths of the battling pack
jaince
| boarde
} thing
! paten
spiration
became!
r. Her
clean
in «a quiet. room,
of the
ashe the
own need for #0
was. the
millionatre
yme-~
and fresh and savory, |
in-
purchases. with
which she was taden, as she strug-
| gled with® her bundies and her um-
brella.
gan's voice.
| New
The mae-| volces had
York she__reallzed that
made this request
| died rather than say such a thing | stro threw a few of his own tones | smiled at ber rescuer.
| Yet the young Wan haa” hice” eyes, Rene Nis Teeth ane eychroes— and —*t suppose st
wp Strectiked his hair even thought. 1) Mavel realized that’ no Sounds ever psatd. oo
“anust—tip “you;"*
“Let me help,” sald Lorillard Mor-
In her six weeks. in
few
She
sire
| de
" i made
sa loaeman | sad
fittiie. tabie,.
Of course; 4n-the-end, all.the money
|
+
|
| make
| aceount
+e
warning
| before
| silver
j
/
rr
av
|
‘
+
“You want to keep your eye t
» dinner
ve me
on
an }
befotr
the
from the
Lorillard
add
di i
some—}
ares irnet
Morgan was
cream
gas
beating. potatoes,
Mabel's
to
the proper!
stoak By!
everything |
something in the}
ut to be the egg
Morgan had in
and «butter at
tion
thing
was ationding
and
little
yen soning 4& thick
the time y had ec
The
d «
Lorillard
ne
was ready
casserole
Plant that
deed seen
turne
‘Real meat!” gasped Margie over
the steak later “And what did you
put in that casserole?’
“Just pinch of something,”
Mabel Everything was
right The egg plant
exe plant The
Lorillard
a said
eRactly
was nét merely
potatoks were
told
pommes
were hot
dish of Autumn fruits
of.the table, and the
amber of Mabel’s after-dinner
the perfect
content four gorged
grew warm and happy.
Outside the wind, drove spiteful)
flurries of rain-against the windows,
and the loud drip sounded from the
efives of the brick building that w
their rear view
“Sing to begged = Margié
Mabel sat down at the rented plano
First she gave them one or two of}
the new French group 6 Which Pie-
tro Cencl had launched her. Then, |
with a of homecoming, sho!
sang thé aria from “Butterfly,”
not,
pommes
The
through}
the
clear
coffee,
In deep:
and relaxed
Morgan
but
rolis
her
de ciel
clear
terre,
liftie
The
centre
in
essert
the
us!”
sense
then |
“The Rosary,” followed by_"The Land}
of the Laughing Water.”
“You didn't close your eyes,” she}
reproached Lorillard Morgan. {
“How could I?" he asked. }
FAME IS A JADE
His eyes persisted in obtruding |
themselves between her arid the let-|
ter she wrote to Herbie the next
morning. It was a letter telling him;
that, instead of a Metropdélitan debut,
this “Year Prete” Cétict ~ awavised a
Coreert debut ir horetet Matt: She!
wou}d make her individual impres-}
sion upon Wer crities. “Musical New
York, would be present, instedd of
the society rabbie-— \
His reply came, just after Eistro}
Cenci.bad more fully outlined the}
details of the Lorelet Hall debut. It)
could be managed, he had said, for!
about twelve hundréd dollars. Mabel!
had heard him appalled. Afid yet
tliat night, at the dinner to. which
Lorillard Morgan had asked ber, he
told her that it was not too much.
“Fame,” he said, pushing aside the
pink-shaded candlestick, that they
might-tatkcmore directly across their
‘ig a ealoulating _
sorry
| get
to
| Httl® other. thing he could do?
| know
|
After the second song of her,
Italian group, Majors of the “Union- |
Newa” drooped forward, looking at}
his watch. She haf seen him make
a note on his programme. After the
French group, Hartwell of the
“Clarion” and Smith of the “Review”
went out together. Before the aria,
Wayiand of the “Recdra” slipped into;
fa seat beside Lorillard Morgan. And
she, saw the critic of the “Press”
standing besidé the rear exit.
Afterward, in the spacious recep-
tion-room, behind the stage, she wae
kissedand gasped over, Pietro Cenecl |
brought up a critic or two.
“Very creditable? said Wayland of
the “Record.”
| “Mabel darling!” cried Ifabel Alli-
“Excellence he _said\ _ briefty.] son, holding both Her hands in both
“Nerve gets you a long way Money her own, “I never was_s0 proud!
gets you a long way But it YOu lawasn't That-a-high C?. There!’ she
Skyy en on be pretty sure ‘you're | turned to Herbie in triumph. “I-told
ponds you it was a high C!"
ner eee et ee “Well, that’ ov ert’. said Herbie,
“This soup,” he told her’ “Is more looking down at her Do Inabel and
or less famous for that very reason.” [ have to eat alone to-night? . :
She and Pinky and Margie, had
re dit. ° . ‘ ,
Pee ene - PO I aware . Sueet dinner -with them, and we nt later ke
of some thing.” , “Witching Winnie,” the musical
“There are comedy hit of the season. Herbie was
amazed t6 learn that a musician like
this town,” he went vue ’ at?
people come on heré pokes had let "Witching Winnie” go
1y
bettef In themselves infinite 4 r i
They: think —they — will “t suppose it isn’t cldssical enough
their fight to the stars in| for you," he bald, with a side glance
fifteen minutes. Thousands of} at Tsaber “But lowbrows ttke tsabet
go under of them} #04 me like to bear something with a
They all have-a_bank jtune in.a while." F
béhind them, as The next morning Mabel let Margie
You can afford to wait and Pinky get .away, keeping her
She thought that the eyes search- | head under the bedclothes, to estab-
tng —her—had—in—them—something—of}+ Hah the impression that she was
But she was to Jearn much| still asleep. When they had- gone
the watter—brought back the| She got feverischly into her street
remaining from the ten-dollar| “lttes and went—to—buy—all_the
bill that rilard Morgan laid upon} Papers
hfe plate. She for instance Her face not its ex-
that h a few plays pression as read In the
Wher be put “Clarion” she found that Mabel Innis
asked Almost a western elirger
herself ‘ ality, had given ambitious pro- |
Probably | gramme yesterday afternoon. Smith
Rhea betthe “Review eave here tine to thet
t whe effect that Miss Innes gave promise
| of hecoming a.pleagant éxponent of
lyrics. Wayland of the “Record” said
Managers, She had personal charm, but had not
of friend- | a8 yet perfected the bel Maj
had Httle} ave scathing dismissal. She
ready to pull out | Jacked beauty of voice and should not
any time the lights} have challenged criticlam
play, he told her, dike} familiar difficulties of the aria
had to be good her programme, She had been off
he key at ‘least and in its upper
“That's the magic.” register her voice was forced She
turned to the “Press.” There Loril-
lard Morgan's friend had recorded
that a friendly audience had warmly
appaluded Miss Innis’s programme
Tey Ce RAE WER TIT TUT Teel alia rds eer eter
t Mabel Innis would} eapocial metier, and granted the wis
recital at Lorelei Hall at} dom which selected as her first
lock «¢ Friday afternoon.| core, “By the Land of the Laughing |
were sche-| Water.” and as her second the over
or that week. She had tickets) worked and sentimental “Rosary.”
of Mar gasping! Much as he deplored the appearance |
over the wonder and splendor of the] of these numbers on any
had package. | py,
Cenc and their |
in ‘the world doe
thing, J6& the
isn't there.“
“What is thar?” she-asked
‘t accomplish any-
intial ingredient
somé-
see
of
on
with
and
thousands tragedies |
“Young |}
an infinite
in
an
rance
about
them Home
starve don't a once
have
you
did
she
learned, change
e} them
|
she
Margie!
1 Ww
breath!
on?”
‘i of pleasing person
a
never
hi
n he
was his reply
eouldnt —helleve
many. people
Editors
sserted that, knowning
Tit tle
ays
friends
ahe
knew 80
one instance
azingtly
canto
out
her a
ays, like daggers,
their boots
A
a
—- by the
went off
upon
a prima de
Excellence said
again. one,
Her own hour made its winged ap-
proach. . Then the end of March,
she line in the musical an-
at
SAW
VSR HOCNT
a
ew
effect
heard |
to the
be
three «
en
‘“ourteen other recitals
ther
them e
programme
recognized her especial gift in the
rendering of intimate lyries, and en-|
couraged her to pursud this obvious}
line
The telephone shrilied. That would
Herbie. She had Herbie, healthy |
ardent Herbie, and the eight
with three baths. The
telephone shrilled again
No! said to it Not that.”
rd time it spoke she reac hed |
receiver. |
is it?” she whispered
gorgeous morning,”
}
nt accepted her
pupils
have representation
wou and out
Isabel achedule
Wednesday, w be
The right costume, the
accompanist, pro
groups of Italian
ind German, the
ballads,
Peitro
friends
The
Herbie
to
"8
would a
tipt
Allison
critics in
and
arriv
n suld be
and
reom
her gue
aympat
vided
ant fre
the Er
hearsal
Herbie
possesstve
for
were house,
he
+
’
songs.
nie aria ahe
plish all were In re t
The
| for the
and} “What
time, | “It's
that! Lorillard Morgan
"It it?’ she found somewhere
voice that*was not her own
“Pye just got another play back,” |
he went on. “Do you feel like cele--
Drating with me?"
Mobdel,-who-n moment
seen her own dead face
tom of a deep green pool
weed floating ck and forth over
is) suddenly Inughed
know “Aren't you a darting?”
the telephone
“Will you confirm that?”
‘phone, in replying, did not
either of mockery
magnificent
came on
dinner and
She—fended
schedule A said
ready
very
w show
night him
for the disappointment
even Wouldnt he take Isabel {,
After Friday would be free_to
lark about, Until then she begked
forgivenéss.
“it's not - much of
told her mutinoualy
‘I know, Herbie she
"Td dregdfully sorry Rut
the all-important thing
Everything depends on it
Distinctly, » realized, he was
revolt Yet what could shé do?
lariliard Morgan had been differ
ent He had telephoned that he had
the critic on the to agree
stay half of)
rather
there
a)
in his|
she
welcome,”
hefore had
n ,
at the bot
with sea
it, |
he
pleaded
Friday
you she said-te
® in tale; |
The
apeak in
light-j
}a tone or
| ness
“Yes,
The
| found
any) optiv
Press anid Mabel
intimacies
them
of
through
programme
hint hear
whichever
she would
And was
Automat |
stilt
As
remember,
and rolls
her
statement
admission
been
of
ten
and
could
coffee
an
her
at ovctork
time
Mabel
been
Ave
tous
ns
had
space
nearly
ther
Mainly there
firming of her
and Lorillard
tha. his _
eriigmattc
“But what had T to give
asked.” “I'm just a- failure.”
“You've promised ‘to give mé¢
truth avout my singing, “she said
“T the singing of the most
heatrtiftt} and—-heloved of persons.in
the whole World,” he ~ answered
“And that is the truth.”
“No,” she’ smiled, ridiculous!f{
happy “You must tell.it all.”
All about them the down-and-outs
were breakfasting,_the thin clerks,
Yes,” she said into the telephone
“When. it. is over you, can tell me!
what you think of my singing You
you .never have.”
There was a
end or the witt
wish me to,” he sald slowly
“And you're to -shut- your
while you listen,” she told-him.
As ashe hung up the receiver,she
knéw that, with Rose Stanley's si-
lence, on her first night in New York,
Lorillard Morgan's. silence had been
more vocal than all spoken comments
on her volee. Rose Stanley's silence,
she felt, had the needed knowledge
behind it She had suspected ig-
noble jealousy in October. Back of
Lorillard Morgan's silence, however.
she was sure there lay not only
had been
telephone
|
con-'|
|
|
Morgan's }
silence at the other had
Then, “lf you Feally
eves never
yout’ he
eyes
the
note
|
;
the stenographers, the errand, girls,
te : | the homeless apartment dwellers, |
kngwiedae. but..ghe friend)iest. 5008. emr--ererret—emen-mreetone Torte
who do the hard work ‘of the world.!
THE CRITICS SCORE *~) Lortitard-Morgan, whose _play bast}
She saw him slip-inte his seat at} just come back
the rear of Lorelel Hall just aa she! whore friends had -applaaded -her
began the first of “Caro mio| yexterday at Lorelei Hall, smiled at}
bent,” which opened her programme. | each other, In the solitude of their
Tt_was not hard to gee him. He was! complete unferstanding™3
one of perhaps a hundred and fifty ; “I've hoped I was wrong,” he told
listeners, sprinkled among the thous-| her, “that you milghtn’t have to be
and seats of the hall. Herbie w: S| disappointed. And I've been glad you
there, handsome and conspicuously; had money, You ‘can go on trying.
ruddy among the city faces. Beside | Life is what ever you make of it.”
*+him was Isabel Allison, stim and She shook her head at him
smart.in her new New. York olitfit. “No.” she said. And she told him
Margie was there, and Pinky, their/about- the © twetny-seven hundred
friends, Pietro’s pupils, and the; dollars. “It's all over. But [ve a
critiess jangutdty teafing - over -her}-wondertul-tdaa,* =
programme, l “Don't say that it’s over.” he bes-
} panting;
| The
| sojourns
| of
am! Mabel Innis.j _
| ee - Illustrated ‘by H. P. DENISON
Mabel Thought She Could Sing So She Went to New
York to Study and Ultimately Conquer the World—It
. Did. Not Quite Turn Out the Way She Intended, But
7 ‘She Found Eventually’ Both Art and Love
ged.
you.’
“Figlione!”
with her hand.
his name.”
As they walked back
apartment she sketched her ‘idea.
She would open a dining-reom. It
should not be’a grotto, nor a cellar.
It should be clean and quiet. There
should be a fireplace and: polished
brass, She would serve only as many
people as the place would hold, There
should be no pushing. There sho
be much -white paint. She had her
mother’s linen. and. old sliver and a
houseful of quaint old Diack walnut
There ‘should: be enough tight.
There should be nothing canned.
FIGEIONE SALUTES HER
The Little White House took tts
immensely #uccessful stride from the
beginning. In six thonths it had a
reputation, and she had almost her
sisty-tive hundred dollara in’ the
bahk. She had added a secdnd white
room, and only those who telephoned
a day ahead saw the ‘4
Littl White. House
always a place for Margie
and many @ lean genius fattened his
legs under her old walnut, She
Herbie ‘and Isabel Allison
dinner there, when
heneymooning to New
looked .into _Herbie's
lenance,and saw-
Isabel, she knéw
at least forgiven,
her
And
“Figlione’s back, He'll listen to
She covered her
“I never want to
eyes
hear
to Margie's
inside
She
the
kept
and Pink
gave
a
thes
Yor)
ruddy
rarttence
Trerbile
+f
the
that
if
of
had
no trotten
the next
great Figlone Sh
merely «a little man
late with Lorillard Morgan
with puffy__circles under
She did not ‘know him, but
she. knew from the
other late
someone
night ashe
sAW
who
saw
at
c
tha
and
his eyes
stir
that
of importance
As always, when sh
Morgan's f she séarcheg fe
the «rent that had told
him it would some day to-tel
To-night,
read
the
was
among
diners this
saw Lorillard
ace r
news she
have
as she looked at him
fte—uncoimmon messes.
and the little fat man had
luxuripusty fe an hour befo
had a moment's T
heard the a elb«
alway mad Pp
“Are you fo
asked. She turned
“They've
charged
“Yen,”
He
dined
r she
she
that
ure en
voice t her w
her jises race
free r & moment
it
taken your as she
he admitted
thing offer
homage. And I've
She looked at him
“Anything,” she said
“Would you mind very much meet-
ing Piglone: Ho's Very AORIOUS.” P
iglone The old bruise,
gotten, ached afresh. The dead face,
deep the pool, showed dimly
again before t
“Why, of And
Loriiard Morgan went to fetch him.
fat, little man before her,
and Nev she
him say in
in dined
had dined in the Little
White House had been, he said,
mere dining Rather. rite, a
sacrament
“The casserole
worthy of the
had that -which
the soupcan—how
pinch of something
eloquent ha m
of
thumb
tions!
*“T've some-
besides
ask.”
to you now
a faver to
in once
her
course she said
stood
panting
heard
bowing
had he
America
to-night
It
his man
as he
no a
he
Rue
cannot
told
Lafa
tye
her was
ote It
taught,
the
gesture his
ir was
between
My congratula-
I am you
And I salute your so
ne
ude in
surement
7 the &
delicate me
finger
pursued
nd
he
an
art
For
as
know artist
great
Art!
that
Th her
Lorttiard-Morgenn
them «
Art
Figlione
It is the
one urtiat
Artist!
i ,Momer
ache
t the angulanh
submerged her.
nét” the eyes f
never again -to-fim
eves
c
nigmatic
shé repeated, ax the
cheek
he told her
anotiver
she
great
kissed
“of
repeated after
What was it that Lorillard Morgan
had said that morning, at the auto-
mat, about life being whatever you
made of it? Her eyes surveyed the
{tly lighted- rooms of the Little
White House
“Ah, well,’
amiling upon
him.
she -sighed —happity,
both the smile
that portrait paintera were later.to
make famous, “why not?”
(Copyright; 19787
them
__It aches and throbs with pain, The
tonsils are so swollen that it hurté
to swallow. And the chest feels
“as tight ase drum”.
for-
VICTORIA, B.C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER _ 10,
~Mr.and Mrr-
By Brigqse
Cparreeccormnnnn “*y
rE ee a
HE WEARS ,
pebesctenet
Look! In ZEE MORAS
| Give You tee SATH-
Lay OUT M'SIEURS
LOUNGE ey Tn Sree
AND Sitr
UNDERCLOTHES—
HAS M'STEUR
"SILK UNDERW F
"WEAR? |
ie
A> FRENCH. VALET.--
Tom ae IS
~SENDIN
- BES,
Sab + Got)
Spee
1925.
BUT. You HAVE
ONLY, Two SUITS
FoR HIM To
CARE For-
PERHAPS
‘You'D BETTER
ORDER
“CAROTHER,
Su! TT“
THERE'S He
BELL nNow,1T'S
PROBABLY Him~
LEAveE IT To ME
i KNOW HOw TT
HANDLE THAT
BrRD-- THe 1DEA
IS- 'm' To HAVE
A VACET AT LAST
a
PAR DONG MADAME : (ow Yes —
1AM Zee VALET /. ) Come RIGHT
MONSIEYR EES ins AWD. MLL ¥
To ENGAGE A
VALET MY DC AR
YY wWERS You ze
CY; 2
es
HAH! PEERIAPS MisIEUR se) aa
E€ AS _ THIRT vest ADIEU M’SiEUR =
wo mos = aH _ re CALL AGAIN S e
SHALL -1 Go .
To THE DooR!
iT WOULDN'T
seem —
Digmris D
FoR ‘You
WHY -UH- Yes -
1 HAD THOUGHT
One TNS oF Jee
YeS-'Lt LET
You HNow 1 HAVE
ms ielig ADDRESS‘
NX
YY
SANS
ON
.
;
HE'S COMING OCUER
RIGHT AWAY FOR Ay
YES You Ge
AND ILL PRE-
Temp 1 HAD
FORGoT TEM
Act asout iT
WHAT ARG You
GOING To SAY *
Excuse me
But i HAVE
To LAUGH WHEN
THINK OF
YouR Tw
Suits oF
CLOTHES
AND HAVING
A VALCET-
eo
| HAVE FING RECOMMEND - 1 VALET
FoR ZEEE ASTOR -BILTMORES -- HE
HAVE SEEXTY Suits OF CLOTHES -
rT @6s Teo MUCH BusSY
HE THiS | HAvEe ar |
LEAST. THIRTY
Suits |
| CAN Court-FouR
INCLUDING MY JUMPER [-
YES AnD You
HAVE AN oD
PALR. oF FISHING
REMEMBAH
.
JHE TWMES WEVE
. DeRR—
“TAKE THESE PRESERVES SE PATIENT - DON'T \ |
DOWN TO THE BASEMENT - | LOSE NOUR TEMPER —
BE VERN CAREFDL- AND /| JUST KEEP CALM= (|
FOR GOODNESS SAKE WHEN THINGS GO
Dow WAKE ALL BOM -. / | WRONG, SMILE
Tie 2?
LEA ARD THE - ARCHES
WHO BSESIGNED THAT STMRWAY
{oO KICK HIN FROM HERE
Yo cHINA~ QEt ovT Fs
oF MN WON (( 9
— —— —_ P oH
" NOW Nov GET IN
MN WAS WILL YOU?
GET FUSSY =
JUST TRY —--
: f./
Pa) y |
= / :
4)
_ ai
cS et f**k ula
5 mae Ee ee : : bene
= SS ye yeah aN ah ie es sae be gen Ne eee a ok =
= par aes
OH Bo, WWE SROKEN MN
TOE ON “THAT CONFOUNDED
PAL — VM AS GOOdD-TEMPERED
AS AWNBODM BUT A “THING
Uke “THIS WOVLD MAKE AN
ANGEL BREAK A AHARP =
PIO =e
YM JUST GOING “TO
SIT DOWN HERE AND
=...) TAKE MM “TIME AND
| BREAK THIS DOOR INTO
. A MILLION “TOOTH: MACKS =
JHETS “THE LAST TIME —
\T WILL SLAP i og
THAT wWodDPEeckee
THINKS YouR HEAD IS
—_(T\\_weod — And
- “Yov CAN'T Foot
A woobPecker!)
MUTT AND JEFF ~- Has Mutt Reformed? Ha, Ha!!!
MY UAEE'S AWAY AND NEEE BAS A MUTT Ss WED Me WS PLAY EET piv :
ROLL THAT WOULD CHOKE AN : PINOCHLE, WITH Him ! HAUS ‘You BRING THAT FAT ss rg Mae 28
Ox! AND I'M BROKE > E-cAN WIFE'S AWAY OR & RoLt GF Bitts with '
USE SOME OF WOULDN'T ACCEPT: MY Rote
ee cy * ‘
~ Oo ee s-
3 Ae J¢ c
ee
— ee Bid. 400! } WHAT MAKES MC SORe |S \| PEER wert, murs Home | THe im
THAT You STARTED WITHOUT }T HEEL OLD Mans RePORMED!
RTT \ A CENT AND YOU'REABIG ' ~~ saa aliaiendia
WINNER Now f _¥ ages rE
THEeRe's A LOT OF
T'M GONNA HAVE
Some FUN with
MUTT AND JE
AND TEACH THem
A LESSONL TF
sane *
I'LL PRETEND I'M A BURGLAR,
IT'LL TURN OFF THe LIGHT
AND USE THIS PLASH-LIGHT !
oO THEN I'ur. TAKE THe MONEY
AND Give (IT To
THE HOmMEe FOR
BLIND Mice:
Tee Hee.
vou. met? es YES, AT'S MED You PRomiseD
E iDEA O ME Nou'D Neve L
PUTTING PHONEy CARDS Sena
\MONGY INV A
PINCCHLE GAME!
fe
oe ee
DIDVA HEAR ABOUT : Ceres ote THE.
MOUTH? FORTUNE °
FORTUNE TELLIN’ d
oo CARDS eos. & : :
Ss
— ~~ +
Stee MTT
_
J. ANRIGHT! FOR : : ‘ .
TWo BIG BITES OFF NS 7 ; AWRIGHT. THEN, aN
vAT LICORICE bs GO AHEAD! DONT BLAME Mg?
iP CORK ae ~ \eal I CAN STAND 4 Y STARTING THIS VERY
Wize ue corts WC et ete peste aga
SES! arr - Se ee ers STRING OF
60 To A ont THAT YOU GOT! Sm 8 aad =| RAPPENI
L : ~\ I™ 1D TO . b ¢ pais
IM AFRA ; : HERE'S SOME DESPRIT
VILLIAN LOOKIN’ FORY
“6
\ : WHY, THEN HES GONNA On vIMMiE! |\ *
ott: NUTHIN afi ott RANSOM MONEY From JIMMIE
KIDNAP YOU AWAY YOUR POP AN’ MOM AN’ MAYBE DUGAN!
OFF TO A LONELY Do A LOTTA SHOOTIN’! HELL ss
DIRTY OLE CABIN - FORGET YOURE THERE AN LEAVE &
IN THE HILLS! } NOU CHAINED, TO A POST To STARVE
EXCEPT THE CABIN KETCHES FIRE
AN’ BURNS Down! :
LISTEN! LISTEN! |
owt
= THIS IS MY
. UNCLE CHUCK" FRom
E
ITS THE VERY - WHERE WE OSED ‘To
FELLER .. THE BIG .
= 2 .. ALL # AN’ LooKktt
DARK HAIRED VILLIAN!): © a . = ot | . Win AINT ahd
tm Gonna RUN! ——— CHRIGMIS OR MY